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eC LE TORE 


ranite City Apr ress-Rerrory | 


[P Peat Cosporation newspaper. TWICE-A-1 WEEK —| MONDAY AND THURSDAY 


DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO GRANITE CITY — MADISON— VENICE—PONTOON BEACH—MITCHELL ES 


VOL. NOL 7e—No. 16 


a 


Granite City, Hlinois, Thursday, February 23, 1978 


Firms okay 


sewer work 


‘By BILL WINTER 
Editor 

Joint bidders on construction 
of a major new sanitary system 
said Wednesday afternoon they 
are willing to do the work on the 
basis of their 1976 low bid, 
despite economic inflation since 
that time. 

The contractors’ decision was 
praised by the Madison County 
Board’s Sewer Committee, 
which made plans to confer in 
Springfield tomorrow ‘with 
officials of the Illinois 
Environmental Protection 
Agency. 


Although some problems 


Venice 
fire pro 


An agreement undet which 
the Madison and Venice fire 
departments will provide fire 
protection “to residents of all 
unincorporated areas of Venice 
Township was completed by the 
Venice Town Board Monday 
night. 

Christ Pashoff, township 
supervisor, said the agreentent 
resulted from negotiations 
between Town Board members 
and the mayors and fire 
department officials of Venice 
and Madison. 

Under the agreement, Venice 
and’ Madison fire departments 
will each send a truck on fire 
calls where it is determined that 
more than one truck is needed. 

All fire calls are to be routed 
the Venice fire 
department at 877-2114. If it is 
determined that a second truck 
is needed, Venice will notify the 
Madison department, Pashoff 
said. 

Township officials will urge 
all residents in the unin- 
corporated areas of the town- 
ship to be certain they have 
riders on their fire insurance 
policies providing for payment 
of fire service, Pashoff said. 


Street 


By HARRY BARNES 
Press-Record Staff Writer. 

A new three-year working 
agreement for employees of the 
Granite City street department 
which includes a schedule of 
longevity pay was approved by 
the City Council Tuesday night 
and ratified by the employees in 
a union meeting Wednesday. 

‘The action ends ten months 
negotiations over a new street 
department working 
agreement. \ 

Alderman Warren Decatur of 
the Fourth Ward, chairman of 
the council’s negotiating 


Estes 
defends 


record 


James Estes, endorsed by the 
Democratie Party for sheriff in 
the March 21 primary, this 
week responded to a series of 
articles discussing his record 
while he’ was Chouteau 
Township, ~ highway 
missioner. 

In his statement, Estes 
disctiases some of the points 
made in the series. 

He describes Chouteau area 
roads under his administration 
as'the best in Madison County, 
and stresses his belief that he 
‘could serve effectively in: the 
office: of county sheriff. 

He comments, San Joe 
Estes, and | am a mocratic 
candidate for sheriff of Madison 
County. 

ay am 51 years old, and have 
jived- in’ the Mitchell area: of 
'Chouteau Township all my ‘life, 


‘except. for. the three: years I 
the: Marine Corps in 


com- 


remain to be resolved, 
yesterday’s development ap- 
pears to set the stage for in- 
Stallation work to begin in May 
1978 — and for the entire project 
to be completed by the spring of 
1980. 

The EPA has_ indicated 
massive state-federal ®unding 
can be made available at least 
through March. The prospect of 
actual work starting in early or 
mid-May is believed likely to 
justify another brief extension 
of the grant. 

Pending steps include county 
authorization of a $5 million 
bond sale, selling of the bonds, 


own 
ection 


Fire protection under the new 
pact will include the Benjamin 
addition, a section of Logan 
Avenue that lies outside the 
Granite City limits, where a fire 
in October 1975 touched off a 
controversy involving fire 
protection for the area. 

That fire destroyed oue home, 
damaged two others and for a 
while threatened the life of a 4- 
year-old child. Granite City 
firemen responded to an alarm 
after they learned the child was 
threatened, but earlier had not 
responded ‘to the call because 
the area was outside the city 

As a result a move to annex 
the area to Granite City was 
undertaken and a series of 
meetings of residents was held. 
Pashoff and Venice township 
officials opposed the an- 
nexation, however, and pledged 
township assistance in ob- 
taining fire protection for the 
area. 

Pashoff noted that the 
agreement covers all parts of 
the township outside Madison 
and Venice which are served by 
their own departments, This 
will include Eagle Park Acres 
and several homes which lie 
west of the levee, he said. 


‘Mrs. 


and formal county awarding of 
the construction contract. 

The low bid of $15,564,306 can 
be fulfilled, the committee was 
told yesterday by Marion 
Wilson, representing S. M. 
Wilson & Co., and by Gene 
Sternberg, representing G. H. 
Sternberg & Co. 

While profit would be reduced 
by the passage of time since the 
Sept. 30, 1976, bidding, the work 
can be carried ott without any 
changes or omissions, the 
contractors said. 

Proceeding was optional 
because the bids had expired. 

If a new round of bidding had 


(Continued on Page 8) 


Rt. 35 
fatality 


Donald E. Davis, 62, of 3337 
Fairmont Ave., State Park 
Place, was injured fatally when 
his car crossed the center line of 
State Aid Route 35 and hit the 
auto of Patrick J. Johnson, 30, 
Collinsville, head-on about 
three-tenths of a mile west of 
Lake ‘Drive at 4:15 p.m. 
Tuesday. 

Both drivers were taken by 
Granite City ambulances to St. 
Elizabeth Hospital where Davis 
was pronounced dead’ upon 
arrival, at 5:05 p.m. 

Johnson was admitted to the 
hospital with a fractured left 
wrist, cuts to his head and right 
eyebrow and injuries to his 
chest, left arm and. left leg 

Mr. Davis was born in 
Missouri, He was employed as a 
night watchman for Acker- 
man’s Restaurant in Edward- 
sville, 

He was a member of the VFW 
Post 5691, American Legion 
Post 365, and Moose Lodge 1370, 
all. of Collinsville. He was a 
veteran of World War II. BS 

He is survived by one sister, 
Beulah Coats of Collin- 
sville. 

Funeral services will be held 
‘at 1 p.m. Friday at a Collinsville 
funeral home. Burial will be in 
St. John Cemetery, Collinsville. 


CAMPAIGNING ‘HERE TUESDAY, 
primary candidate for governof of Illinois, Michael J. Bakalis, speaks at a 
luncheon in the Madison Firerhen’s Hall. The luncheon was given by the 


ee 


the 


favored Democratic 


FOUR SECTIONS—44 PAGES 


Madison County Democratic Women’s organization. Seated at the head 


Jobs key issue—Bakalis 


By MICK STRANGE 
Press-Record Staff Writer 
Party unity, jobs and 
criticism of Governor Jim 
Thompson were the themes of 
Michael I Bakalis, 
Democratic éandidate for 
governor of Illinois, as he spoke 
at'the Madison Firemen's hall 
Tuesday noon. 


stand for something. The 
Republicans in. 1976 stood for 
nipthing and they’ starid for 
nothing now. 

{Governor Thotnpson does 
nothing and ddés not get anyone 
nhad. This may be good politics 
but it is bad government,” he 
added. 

"Jobs must be our main 


“Thompson put $4,000 worth 
of new drapes in his. office, 
$10,000 in new carpeting and 
$91,000 in new woodwork, and 
then says this state is broke? 

“This kind-of arrogance is 
beginning to.seep down to the 
public and they won’t stand for 
it,” he,said. 

“We need to talk to the people 


The event was sponsored by keme. There is’seven percent about the facts on Thompson 


the Madison County 
Democratic Women's 
organization and the dinner was 
served by members of the 
Madison City Democratic 
Ladies Club. 

Bakalis, who arrived at 1:30 
p.m., spoke briefly and left. 

“Jobs need to be the major 
theme of the- Democratic party 
in this campaign,” Bakalis said. 

“We, as Democrats, need to 
operate as a_team. This is not 
going to be an easy election, but 
it can be won if this party does 
not defeat itself. 

“J think our party should 


workers, city agree 


committee, said a tenative 
agreement in which the em- 
ployees traded part of their 
third-year pay increase to 
finance initiation of the 
longevity schedule, also in the 
third year, was reached in a 
mediation session last week 

After Tuesday night’s council 
action, employees of the 
department voted two to one in 
a meeting Wednesday morning 
to ratify the proposal. 

The street department has a 
total of 33 employees. 

The long dispute over the 
street department pact involved 


UNITY OF DEMOCRA 


a stalemated controversy over 
a union’ demand that street 
department workers be granted 
longevity pay under a system 
now in effect in the police 
department. toe 

On at least three occasions, in 
‘recent months, the City Council 
approved. proposals for the 
street department employees, 
all of them void of reference to 
longevity pay. All... three 
proposals were rejected by the 
union employees. 

Street department employees 
are members of Teamsters 
Union Local 525, Laborers 


s stressed by 


- Ployees 


Union Local 397, and Painters 
Union Local 120. 

While the new working 
agreement provides a longevity 
pay schedule beginning in May 
1979, the third year of the new 
agreement, the street depart- 
ment employees will receive a 
salary increase of only’ 3.5 
percent that year, instead of the 
8.5 percent pay increase 
granted all’ other city em- 
working agreements, . all’ of 
which are for three years. 


(Continued on Page 8) 


center Hagnauer, 


“foreground, a Democratic’ candidate for governor, cag a brief talk | 
‘Tuesday afternoon at the opening of area Democratic headquarters at 21 
Nameoki Village Shopping Center. Bakalis was introduced by Nelson’ 


in this year’s new ~ 


imployment in Illinois and 
since 1970 over 200,000 jobs have 
gen lost in this state 

“We need to bring jobs to 
los and we need to keep jobs 

Bakalis said. 

ie Bare for education also 
if needed badly, and we need 
Broperty tax relief. 

“‘We don’t need new laws to 
Hop fraud and waste in our 
slate government. We need a 
fpvernor that can stop it. There 
i{ over $3 million a year fraud in 
tiie operation of medicaid,” he 
a|serted. 

“I don’t want new taxes, we 
d)n’t need to raise taxes. There 
ifs over $1 billion in unrealized 
riivenue in this state and $200 
rillion a year goes uncollected 
ffbm deserting fathers. This is 
tke poorest collection rate in the 
eftire country,” Bakalis em- 


Pl asized. 
Thompson claims the state 


néeds money, yet he is asking 
fo a $25,000 a year raise which 
wiuld bring his salary up to 
$7,000 a year. I opposeé this 
stongly. Most people don’t 
eyen earn $25,000 a year. \ 


G:assreots government 
Chbuteau Town Board '7. p.m. 
Tiionday, Feb. 27, at 697a N. 
iorngate Drive. 
Naineoki Town Board 7 p.m: 
tJonday, Feb. 27, at 4250 
Highway 162. 


and what he has done“Yor the 
people; and what he has done is 
sbelueey, nothing!”” Bakalis 


emphasized 
e see Thompson wearing a 


lot of different constumes, but 
we have never seen him 
wearing the .costume of 
governor! 

“I need your help. I am not 
going to have over $3 million to 
spend on a campaign.-What I 
need is you. I promise you that I 
will wage the hardest and 
toughest campaign for governor 
ever waged in this state, but I 
cannot do it alone. 


PRICE 20° 


“Again, let me say I need 
your help,” 

After Bakalis spoke, he 
shook hands with several 
people, visited briefly with 
Madison Mayor Mike Sasyk and 
then went to another political 
rally. 

Speaking just prior to 
Bakalis was Jerry Consentino, 
candidate for state treasurer. 

Consentino related he is from 
a family of 14. He noted he has 
five children and began in 
business as a,shoe shine boy at 
age 13. 

Stating there is a need of a 
businessman as state treasurer, 
he pointed to the fact that in 1959 
he and his wife went into the 
trucking business with $700. He 
was the driver and his wife was 
the dispatcher. He noted his 
trucking business does $10 
million a year in gross sales 
now. 

Mrs. Margaret McPherson, 
East Alton, chairlady of the 


Pa; 
or. Mike’ 
11=+Shrine-PTA 
» blood program « 
12—Clothing center 
aiding children” 


table from the-left are Mrs. Margarct Minzes, treasurer, Mrs. Margaret 
McPherson, chairman of Madison County Democratic Committeewomen, 
and Mrs. Phreda Stifel, secretary. 


(Press-Record Photo! 


Madison County Democratic 
Committeewomen, acted as 
master-of-ceremonies and 
introduced the Democratic 
primary candidates in at- 
tendance. 


Plenty of coal 
for schools here 


A shortage of coal caused by 
the coal miners’ strike is not 
expected to affect the Granite 
City public schools, the Granite - 
City Board of Education was 
told Tuesday night. 

Tully A. Heubner, director of 
business affairs for the district, 
Said only two buildings are still 
heated with coal—Webster 
School and the Logan School 
Annex—and an adequate supply 
of coal has been located to 
assure heat for those schools 
through the remainder of the 
heating season 


State investigation 


An investigation into alleged 
misuse of federal food com- 
modities in the Madison School 
District ‘will be made by the 

“Llinois Office of - Education 
(IOE), aceording to, a 
spokesman at the state office 
Wednesday. 

The exdct nature of the in- 
vestigation has)'not yet been 
determined due to the newness 
of the allegations, it was ex 
plained, 

If federal commodities are 
involved, a. federal in- 
vestigation also may be held, 
the IOK spokesman said. The 


a 
was official: 


crest dren Secdnd from the left is Jim face 


(Press Record Photo) 


state education ottice ad- 
ministers food distribution to 
Illinois schools. 

Harold ‘‘Gene'’ Briggs, 
superintendent of the county 
edutational service region said 
Wednesday that he had been in 
contact this week with the legal 
office of the IOE in Mount 
Vernon. 

Briggs indicated that his 
office will confer with Madison 
school officials this week in an 
attempt to determine the scope 
of the problem. 

The questions surfaced when 
Harold T. Fisk resigned from 


On and off 


the Madison School Board on 
Feb. 16 and said he had been. 
under pressure to resign. 

He acknowledged that the use 
of federal food commodities has 
been under study in Madi€on. 


Press-Record index 


Births . Page 4 
Obituaries... :.-Page ‘4 
Family Pages begin on Page 19 
Sports on . Pages 24 25 26 
Editorials .. Page 27 
Classified ads begin on Page 30 
Amusements ..........Page 35 


the record 


Cluttered-utility posts likely 
to prevent cable TV here 


Granite City has cluttered 
power poles. 

You could have gone all 
through life without losing sleep 
over that bit of information, but 
it may be important. If you 
were hoping to install cable 
television in your home, those 
cluttered poles are a costly 
stumbling block. 

F. Harvey Stewart, manager- 
operations of K-Right Com- 
munications Limited, the Nova 
Scotia-based company. that is 
seeking cable TV franchises in 
Edwardsville and Collinsville, 
says his company has survived 
Granite City and doesn’t fancy 
the prospect. 

Cable TV lines are strung on 
power company poles. They 
must be 40 inches from electric 
lines, and 12 inches from 


eecehoae lines. Here, that 


ould mean. replacing .many 
les and ré-hanging the wires 
tae a costly business. 

“Right would 

bill and isn’t to 88 so. 
If K-Right does. get into 

Edwardsville and Collinge ut 
could beam its pickups to 


tofoot the 


Quad-City area cable central by 
microwave. The cities are close 
enough to make this practical. 
It's the cable installation cost 
that would prevent the local 
connection. ~ 

Of course, the Quad-Cities 
have. the services of’ five 
commercial TV stations and 
one educational television 
Station, and Southern Illinois 
University at Edwardsville 
currently is attempting to 
establish a second educational 
TV channel for the Illinois 
portion of this metropolitan 
area. 


Weather outlook 


Mostly cloudy today with high 
in mid-30s. Winds 15 to 25:miles 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978  Page2 


Thtow a dollar across the Potomac? We 
doij't know about that, but we do know our 


| D 4 TE © S | © ie E S WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE has some 


Malqreen Agency Stores meee Migndertut buys at ECONOMY PRICES to 


you SAVE in whatever department 
GRANITE CITY MADISON BELLEMORE WE FILL MOST you visit. Stop in TODAY by George, for the 
876-5858 877-0828 451-7560 UNION INSURANCE © 


SALE of the SEASON. 
COMMUNITY MEDICAL ARTS BLDG. AND STATE 


877-5032 PRESCRIPTION PLANS af \ 


REG. $1.69 
CLEARASIL 


REG. or VANISH 


STATE GOVERNMENT is explained Monday at 
GCHS South to civics students of Albert Lewis Sr. by 
former State Representative Sam Wolf of Granite City. 


& BEAUTY 


REG. $1.58 
CX 126-20 COLOR FILM 








Ss AIDS 
REG. $6.59—30 FREE W/100 
THERAGRAM-M 4 99 
REG. 59c EACH 

CHAP-ET ¢ 
LIP BALM 

REG. $1.35 “ 

AQUA-FRESH l 0 7 
TOOTHPASTE .4-0z. , 
VITAMIN C 

Oran e Flavor Chewables 

REG. $1.98 REESE « 

HIGH POTENCY 
PAIN RELIEVER 


VITAMINS 
REG. $1.09 WALGREEN 7 U ¢ 





— Ss 
WHEN IT COMES TO 
PRESCRIPTION 


SERVICE 
COME 
TO 


Reese Drug 


you can trust! 


7-02 
ECONOMY 62° | 2 ¢ 
SIZE 


first sign of a 
fore} lo] 


EN eee TA 


REG. $2.92 


MASSENGILL 
LIQUID 
DOUCHE 


REG. $1.44 


99° 


COLD 
RELIEF 


25's 


REG. $1.99 VASELINE 
HERBAL 
INTENSIVE CARE 


LOTION 15-oz. 


REG. $1.33 VASELINE 


HAIR 
pTON iC Ea 


oe 


REG. $1.86. 


MAALOX | 


LIQUID ANTACID 


12-02. l 7 


Head & Shoulders Shannee’ 


Reg. $1.19—-2. 5:0z. Jar 


MEDICATION 


.l* 


REG. $1.79 


DIAL 


LONG LASTING 
Spray Deodorant 
4-OZ. SIZE 


REG. $1.35 


Sn CEPASTAT 


THROAT LOZENGES 


al 


REG.'$1.59—12-OZ. SIZE 


CEPACOL 


ANTISEPTIC MOUTHWASH 


18,  Stigar- 
[ozenges 


REG. $1.99 SCENTED or UNSCENTED 


ELNETT 
HAIR SPRAY 


“1,69 
E a 


a 
REG, $9 ALOE or SUNFLOWER 


ALWAYS 
A 


REGISTERED 
- PHARMACIST. 


_ ON DUTY 


Madison to require 
fee for auto tags 


An ordinance establishing an 
annual fee for vehicle licenses 
and requiring display of. the 
wheel tax stickers by March 26 
was approved by the Madison 
City Council Tuesday night. 

The action constitutes the 
first legal requirement that 
Madison residents pay for the 
licenses which have been 
distributed without cost in the 
past, so long as the license was 
picked up before a specified 
deadline date. 

Passenger vehicle licenses 
will cost $3 each, with all other 
motor vehicles $5. 

Senior citizens at least 62 
years of age will pay $1. 


Residents of Madison have 
until 4:30 p.m. March 24 to 
purchase their stickers, as 
drivers will be issued citations 
and fines levied beginning 
Monday, March 27. 

Failure to have the city 
vehicle license displayed can 
result in a fine of no less than 
$25 and no more than $100. 

Motorcycles and motor 
bicycles do not have to purchase 
the city license at the present 
time. 

Following the meeting, Third 


Ward Alderman Ronald 


Grzywacz said, “I am not sure 
how we wrote this’without in- 
cluding motorcycles, but I am 
going to meet with Tom Gordon, 
chairman of our finance 
committee, and I feel certain 
there will’ be an amendment 
added at the next council 
meeting to include motor- 
cycles.” 

The council accepted a low 
bid of $20,952 from the Anixter- 
Pruzan Company of St. Louis 
for cable and burglar alarm 
supplies. Due to a recent in- 
crease in telephone rates for the 
burglar alarm system, the city 
of Madison will run its own 
cables to the city police 
department. 

“IT want to remind the 
aldermen that we will hold a 
public hearing on Monday at 7 
pan. to gain input on the 
proposed Urban Development 
.grant we are trying to get,” 
Madison Mayor Sasyk said. 

“Our budget is coming up 
again May 1 and I would like to 
ask the finance committee to 
meet with? our recreation 
department to see if there is any 
way we can increase monies for 
this program. Our director is 


doing a fine job with very little 


to operate on,” Sasyk said, 


Poll backs 2 for 
‘ judge, opposes 2 


If voters follow the advice of 
attorneys, they will fominate 
for circuit judge in‘ Madison 
County Democrat Andreas 

“Andy” Matoesian and 
Republican Gerald Cohn. 

An Illinois State Bar 
Association poll this week 
recommended two of the four 
March 21 primary election 
candidates. 

Not recommended were 
Democrat William E. Johnson 
and Republican Roland W. 
Griffith Jr. 

Matoesian, who is serving as 
a circuit judge by appointment 


Granite City Press-Record 
Published Monday ond Thursday by 
Granite City Press-Record, Inc. 


Granite City, tM 


Subscription Rotes 


Per Copy-. .. 20c 


Mail Subscriptions 

Year 6 Mo. 
City Rural Routes .. $19.60 $ 9.80 
Zones 1-2 21.40 10.70 
Zone 3... 21.80 10.90 
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y Area Code 618 
_ Servicemen....... 9.80 4.90" 


of the Illinois Supreme Court, 
voiced pleasure at being 
recommended, « 

Colin described the favorable 


vote as meaningful because it is 


done by secret ballot. 


Judicial candidates must 
receive 80 or more out of a 
possible 100 points in order to be 
recommended. 


Factors are legal ability, 20, 
integrity, 35, legal experience, 
10, courtesy ‘and consideration, 
10, fairness in reaching 
decisions, 15, and in- 
dustriousness and promptness, 
10. 


\ 
Of 164 lawyers responding in 


the poll, 76 are Democrats, 29 
Republicans and 59 unaffiliated. 


Johnson said: he is disap- 
pointed by the vote. “I hope it 
won't affect my chances of 
being elected. There were 
others emmently qualified who 
weren't recommended, It’s still 
the people who make. the 
choice.” 


“T don't understand it,’’ 
Griffith said. ‘‘But I don’t think 
it matters. The lawyers don't 
elect you.” 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 


REVIVAL 


NOW IN PROGRESS 


SALVATION—-HEALING—DELIVERANCE 
FOR BOTH SOUL AND BODY, 


Tt A 
THE 


OLY GHOST TO FILL 


HEAR 
_ EVANGELIST 
NORA (HOSNER) LEHMAN 


SINGER’and 


7:30 P.M. 


USICIAN of PLANT CITY, FLORIDA 


NIGHTLY 


BETHESDA TEMPLE 


22ND AND STATE ST. 
_ PASTOR REV. CHARLES BROWNII 


Tee F restr Ipuon VelVery "nese UIug olor 


intial eh ua 





Numbered tickets 
identify purchasers 


Some teachers are criticizing 
what they feel is ‘undue 
pressure”’ to purchase tickets to 
a fund-raising cheese and wine 
party March 5 for Vasil 
Eftimoff* a candidate for 
superintendent of the Madison 
County educational service 
region. The event will be at the 
Round Table Restaurant_ in 
Collinsville. . 

Many ‘teachers: have been 
mailed numbered tickets to the 
event with a letter requesting 
that théy pay for the tickets. 
“Since the tickets are num- 
bered, he can tell who bought 
them and who did not,” one 
teacher said. 

Eftimoff said that identifying 
everyone who purchases tickets 
is required under the campaign 
disclosure law and prenum- 
bering the $10-per-person 
tickets was the only way to 
comply with that law. 

As administrative assistant 
for pupil personnel services in 
the Graite City public schools, 
he has direct supervision over 
all resource teachers and 
special education teachers in 
tHe school district. 

‘I can see how some of them 
might think I was watching to 
see if they were buying the 
tickets, but the truth is I have no 
choice. 

“Anyone buying more than 
$20. worth of tickets must be 
listed on the campaign 
disclosure sheet required to 
filed with the county clerk,’ he 
told the Press-Record Wed- 
nesday. 

“The numbers are important 
for that and for accounting 
purposes, so someone does not 


KEEP 


ANDY MATOESIAN 
AS CIRCUIT JUDGE 


Cold for by committee 10 keap Andy 
Motoasion es Cirealt Judge, Dr. Al Trtenl. 


print off a bunch of copies. The 
tickets are being prepared and 
sent out by other teachers who 
volunteered to help in my 
campaign. : 

“Campaigns are expensive 
and you have to solicit from 
everyone you know. My op- 
ponent did the same thing for 


shis party recently,” Eftimoff 


asserted. 


BURGLARIZE OFFICE 

About $6 in loose change is all 
that is known missing after a 
burglary at the office of Stearns 
Auto Sales, 3711 Nameoki Road, 
between 11:30 p.m. Monday and 
8:55 a.m. Tuesday. A two-foot 
square window was broken and 
entry was gained by climbing 
through the opening. Drawers 
in the office were ransacked. 


. 


aes 


iyuesnencienemnss 


‘ 


CAST OF OLIVER. The Granite City High School 
North Advanced Speech and Vocal Department will 
present the musical “Oliver” on Thursday and Friday, 
March 2 and 3, in the Memorial Auditorium. Seated at 
center from left are Julie Schrenk, Dawn Duffin and Lisa 
Randall. Standing from left are: Steve Carr, Hill 


SOUTH SPEECH PARTICIPANTS. Students of Granite City High School South at 
the East Alton Wood River speech tournament were, from left, David King, second 
place in radio speaking; Laurie Ferrere, second place original comedy; Cheska Anseltno, 
fourth in dramatic interpretation, and Jeff Robinson, fifth place in humorous 


interpretation. 


LOMBARDI INTERIORS 


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ae 


Twist Hard twisted nylon yarns that are spe- 
cially designed for, years of outstanding peg 


Broadwater, Jeff Senter, Lonnie Penrod, Dawn Walker, 
Donna Jones, Robert Slate, Shannon Boyles, Charles 
Whitsell, Laura Sevec, Sandra Cavins, Lynda Loftus, 
Mark Belleville, Paula Milton, Mark Kastelic, Joan 
Fabisher, Becky Muzzarelli, Royce Meyenburg, Carla 
Cunningham, Kevin Duffield, Tammy Pounds, Marie 


McCracken. 


Rites held for Mrs. Gorwoda 


Private funeral services were 
held Wednesday at a Caseyville 
funeral home for Mrs. Anna M. 
(Bluemner) Gorwoda, 88, of 
2724 Harvey Place. 

She died Monday at the 
Chastain Nursing Home, 
Highland. 

Survivors 


include three 


daughters, Mrs. Kay Acquaviva 


Leaders) ;. 


of Granite City, Mrs. John 
(Mary) Petty, Gravois Mills, 
Mo., and Mrs. Frank (Anna) 
Giangiugilo of Miramer, Flar.; 
two sons, Paul Lubeck of 
O'Fallon and Carl Gorwoda of 
Colorado Springs,.Colo.; two 
brothers, Joseph Bluemner of 
Collinsville and Victor 
Bluemner of Caseyville. 


SHOP BOTH STORES 


Downtown Store Only! 


LEADER BUYS OUT 


Ladies Winter Fashions of "JERES” 


A WELL KNOWN QUALITY FASHION STORE 
OF COLLINSVILLE, ILLINOIS 


FRITZI, JANE COLBY. 


MEN'S 


Fabrics 


216. 
46 | Filling 


WE GIVE AND REDEEM EAGLE STAMPS — YOUR EXTRA SAVINGS| 


Dresses 


SAVINGS 


Yo Of 


WITH MOST ITEMS SELLING FOR 2 OFF 
THE MARKDOWN PRICE! 


Sweaters 


| 28] Suspender Jeans |14%| 4*| 


60 INCH 100% POLY/DOUBLEKNIT 


INCLUDED IN THIS GROUP ARE.... 
LONG DRESSES, STREET LENGTH DRESSES. 
TOPS - SLACKS - SWEATERS - JACKETS - COATS. 
SLEEPWEAR - ROBES - LINGERIE. 


ALL FROM FAMOUS MAKERS SUCH AS JERREL, SUNNY 
SOUTH, JO HARDIN, JANTZEN, BRADLEY, CATALINA, 


OF AT 
LEAST 


. ORIGINAL 
PRICE 


Pe.| ITEMS | 


edie! 
1°3/ 88°| 


100% POLYESTER 72x90" “SPARTA” 
19 lankets.......... 


GIRLS — ODDS AND ENDS 


| 37|Brapes____|14*| 4” | 


SALE TRY A NEW WARM-UP 


GRANITE CiTY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs.. Feb. 23. 1978 ’ Page 3 


Rangers chili day Saturday 


The annual chili day fund 
raising. project, sponsored by 
the Royal Rangers, Outpost 73 
of Tri-City Park Tabernacle, 
will be held Saturday from 11 


Cannabis charge 
names youth, 18 


Ricky D. Wofford, 18, of 3325 
Terrace Lane, was charged at 
1:30 p.m. Tuesday with 
possession of cannabis and a 
controlled substance after 
laboratory reports allegedly 
confirmed that items reported 
taken from his car after a Jan. 7 
accident were marijuana and 
illegal drugs. 

Wofford’s auto went out of 
control on Nameoki Road at 
East 25th Street, spun sideways, 
knocked downa traffic light and 
struck a fire hydrant, police 
said. 

Officers alleged finding a 
large plastic bag containing 115 
grams of marijuana on the 
floorboard, another bag con- 
taining 43 grams of marijuana 
in the glove compartment, and 
a plastic bottle containing three 
pills on the front seat. 

Wofford was released on a 
$500 cash bond and a $5,000 
recognizanze bond by Associate 
Judge Thomas Gibbons. 


a.m, to 7 p.m. in the church 
hip hall. 
fe Mexets entities the holder to 
servings of chili, a beverage 
and dessert. Other items on the 
menu, at an additiona ‘cost, 
include chili ee ae He. 
rej ir hot dogs. rry- 
veers will be available at the 
rear kitchen door, according to 
Senior Commander Jerry 
man. 
eocnmainies Freeman added 
this is the only money making 
project of the group and in 
conjunction with the event a 
ticket selling contest is in 
progress, among the boys. 
Those selling the most tickets 
may select the top prizes ac- 
cording to their sales record, he 
said. 


KIRKPATRICK BURGLARY 

A $65 clock radio, an $85 
electric drill, $40 worth of 
women’s clothing, $20 worth of 
auto parts, two cartons of 
cigarettes and an antique lamp 
in the shape of a chuckwagon 
were stolen during a burglary at 
the home of Meredith Rogers, 
3904 Kirkpatrigk Homes, bet- 
ween 6:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. 
Tuesday. Entry was gained by 
removing the wood frame from 
around the plexiglass in.a door 
and reaching through to unlock 
the door. 


ON SALE NOW 
RU TUES., FEB. 28 





MISSES JUNIORS 


JUNIOR 


Sweaters . 


Sleepwear 


MISSES - JUNIORS 


, | MISSES JUNIORS 


Knit Tops... 


MISSES. 


Jump Suits 


‘MEN S- YOUNG MEN S. 


Sweaters ... 
YOUNG MEN S 


Denim Jeans 


STUDENTS 


Bib Jeans 


BOYS NO-FAULT 


Denim Jeans. 


STUDENTS NO-FAULT 


Denim Jeans... 


1 23. Fabrics....... 
EXTRA WIDE 


CHILDRENS: 


Sleep 


Blankets 








Shirt Blouse 
MISSES SHIFTS - PJ S - LONG GOWNS: 


Winter Coats 


PAINTERS FOR GUYS & GALS 


OSH-KOSH" FOR GUYS & GALS. 


Suspender Jeans 


60 INCH 100% POLY/DOUBLEKNIT 


Tailored Panels . 


INFANTS 36x50 "THERMO 


— SdWW4S 3193 W3303a GNV 3/19 aM 








SONIAVS VULX3 UNOA 





there's never been a better time to buy 
the Lees Carpet you want. Choose from 
deep plushes, long lasting twists and 
elegant fashionable sculptures. All in a 
wide variety of decorator colors. 
For the next 2 weeks save on... 


formance. Vibrant colors add to the desira- 
bility of this long wearing best selling 

Lees Carpet Reg. $12.75 *1085 
Tempting Texture Level loop pile construc- 
tion combined with multi-color yarns cre- 
ates a look that complements the 

design of any'room Reg. $11.95 *8° | 


PLUS MANY OTHER CARPET SAVINGS 


look designed to perform anywhere 
in busy homes, Reg. $17.75 15” 


PANT BOOTS 


FAMED 
REG. 34.99 


SUTTIN 

By AiR STEP 
“AIR STEP" makes tough going fleece lined 
for a cozy feeling. Boot the snow and the 
cold in “AIR STEP” Fashion! 


Sculptured Plush A luxurious carved texture 
that reflects the finest of traditional carpet 


styling. A wide range of decorator 
colors Reg. $14.85 *12° 


SALE ENDS SATURDAY 
MARCH 11, 1978 


awn kates 











Park volleyball 


MONDAY, Feb. 20 
Co-ed Red Division 
Wild Dogs 16-7-15, Nameoki 
Presbyterian 14-15-7 
Dirty Dozen 15-11-15, 
Beginners 6-15-5 
Women’s Saythern Playoffs 
Peters Construction 15-15, 
Press-Record 9-6 
Clean Craft over Upper Level 
by forfeit 


TODAY, Feb. 23 
Co-ed Blue Division 
Sammy's II vs. Groucho’s, 7:30 
p.m 
MeDonald's vs. Sammy's Stars, 
8:30 p.m. 


SATURDAY, Feb. 25 
Granite City Juniors Red at 
Valley, Mo. II, 4:15 p.m. 


Park basketball 


FRIDAY, Feb. 17 
Men’s Southern Division 
Victory Tavern 62, Jack’s Auto 
Repair 48 
Arlington Athletic Club 76, 
Midtown Pharmacy 69 
SATURDAY, Feb. 18 
Men's Eastern Division 


The, 


FOSTER 


“FREDDIE” 


FREDERICK 


DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE 
FOR COMMITTEEMAN. 
OF THE STH PRECINCT 


TUESDAY, MARCH 21 


FORA RIDE TO THEROUS 


CALL 451-4843 


PAID FOR BY F, FREDERICK 


No Shows 30, Kelcey’s Bar 19 
Captain’s Clipper 64; K-Mart 44 
Men's Southern Division 
Arlington Athletic Club 78, 

Jack’s Auto Repair 49 
Midtown Pharmacy 65, Hook’s 
47 
Men's Northern Division 
Granite City Sports Club 54, 
Bandits 48 
Victory Tavern 61, 
Tavern 60 
TUESDAY, Feb. 21 
Men's Western Division 
Jacobsmeyers Flyers 57, Ocho's 
27 
St. Elizabeth Hospital 
Mathews by forfeit 
Men’s'Church League 
City Temple 78, Tri City Park 
Tabernacle 38 
Niedringhaus Methodist 62, 
Calvary Baptist 61 


TODAY, Feb. 23 
Women’s Division 
Jacobsmeyers vs. Pontoon 
Mobil, 8:15 p.m. (Coolidge) 
Imperial Mobile Homes vs 
Ralph and Charlie’s Steak 
House, 7:15 p.m. (Grigsby) 
Five “E” Chords vs. Ken and 
Rose's, 8:15 p.m. (Grigsby) 
Men's Church League 
Nameoki Presbyterian vs 
Nameoki Methodist, 7:15 p.m 

(Coolidge) 

MONDAY, Feb. 27 
Men’s Eastern Division 
Minnie’s Blue Stars vs. No 
Shows, 7:15 p.m, (Coolidge) 
Kelcey’s Bar vs. Captain's 
Clipper, 8:15 p.m. (Coolidge) 
Men’s‘Southern Division 
Ernie and Annie’s vs. Arlington 
Athletic Club, 7:15 

(Grigsby) 


Crone SEMMNEEG “a 


RA 
RCOfE, PHONE S 
451-9116 & 
3304 NAMEOKI RD. Eg 
or 


Sammy’s 


over 


Midtown Pharmacy vs. Victory 
Tavern, 8:15 p.m. (Grigsby) * 
Jack Auto Repair vs. Sammy’s 
Tavern, 7:15 p.m. (Prather) 
Men's Western Division 
Groucho’s vs. Ocho's, 8:15 p.m. 
(Prather) 


LMC alg 


SUNDAY, Feb. 19 
Bowland 
His and Hers 
Tony Feldmann 
Charles Parks . 

Mary Hunt 
SarahJohnson............ 
Jean Kudelka............. 

Kings and Queens 
Reba Moore 201, 539 
Jerry Hitz ..............213, 575 
Doghouse League 
Leona Heiman + +217, 558 
Greg Roberson 222, 600 
Twilight League 
Rosa Schubert..........221, 544 
Les Parmer .. --214 
Max Merz..............+.++-564 
Tri-Mor 
Queen and King Pins 
Roger Pitts. . + +203, 548 
Julie Stein 180 
Mable Carter .. wiricoMTT 
MONDAY, Feb. 20 
Bowland 
Early Birds 
Arlene Moore 
Flowers 
Donna Weeks 
Senior Citizens 
Ace DeMott 
Ray Harrison... 
Frances Feldman .. 
Verna Moehle ........... 
Mixed Couples 
Betty Harper 182, 533 
Gary Stanek 204 
Ace Stanek 573 
‘Tri-Mor 
Uncle Charlie’s 
Loretta Allen ...... 
Diane Biggs 
Businessmen 
Mike Reichwein 


-587 
209 
517 

517 

197 


221, 556 
187, 488 


225, 553 
. 553 
- 183 
- 469 


194 


-231, 598 


S09 Xm EE 


DOWNTOWN GRANITE CITY 
& NAMEOKI VILLAGE 


EXTRA SPECIAL! 


BOY'S 


‘WRANGLER’ 


JEANS 


$10,00 to $12.00 If Perfect 


S 54 


2 ws. °10 


Sturdy Flare Leg Denims 
and Twills, Sizes for 


e@SLIMS @eREGULARS eHUSKIES 
pee BUYNOW AND SAVENI 


- Ellectrophonic— 


ea 
JUKE BOX 


$349 


Electrophonic - 


DOWNTOWN: OPE 
NAMEOKI: Open Nites to 8:30 


Open Sun. 12:30 


Rosemary Hogue ... 
Jean Burge ....... 
Bob Winfield 

Terry Hogue... 


Rich Rea 
Jim Crouch 


Randy Witter 
Paul Kacera 
Richard Bauer 
Marcie Mitchell 
Diane McIntyre 
Bev Fanning . 
Carol Davis 
Roselyn Angeloff 


Mary St. John ......... 
Pansy Jones . 


Russ Flemming . 
Jim Stout 


Linda McGee 
Mary Boyer . 


Jim McClelland .. 


Ladies 
Glenda Dollins ..... 


Flipper Tail cB 


EskimoKid . 
Wyatt Erpp 


Pin Spinners 
janet Timmons 
AfternoonOuts = 


Sandy Kozzak . 
Charlotte Pise 


Teachers 


Alice Koenig .... 
Verna Ullman 
John Svoboda . 


His and Hers 
5-247 
7.553 
5-213 
Top Ends 3 
ae 2.601 
é 5-224 
GC Steel = 
» 223, 581 
Mens 
226, 620 
. 222,613 
‘Tri-Mor 
Bowlettes 
206, 515 
Bee Line Fashion 
- 179, 490 
Early Risers 
- 196, 501 
Good Times League : 
+++ 19%, 467 
CFU 222Women / 
«+ -202, 503 
Ladies Quad-Cities 
i214 
Men's. 2 
1.199 
£.530 
WEDNESDAY, Feb 22 
Bowland 
Merry Mixers 
chee 192 
ooea - 517 
Men’s Industrial 
287, 559 


MONDAY & FRIDAY. 
TO 8:30 P.M. 


to 5:00 P.M. 


SALE! 


Samsonite’ 


LUGG 


AGE 


Regular $30 to $72 


Now °24°°,,$57® 


Concord. The smart luggage 


value for bargain wise 


travellers. PacRed with convenient no-nonsense - 


interior extras that really 


make traveling a joy. 


Stylishly outfitted with rugged polypropylene shells. j 
Smartly wrapped up in fashion-right colors with 
coordinating trim. When every trip is an adventure, 
choose Concord—the intelligent traveling companion. 


Ladies Reg. $30.00 
eShoulder Tote 

Ladies Reg. $32.00 
eBeauty Case. . 

Ladies Reg. $35.00 


eOvernighter . 
Ladies Reg. $45.00 


024" Puliman.. 


Ladies Reg. $60.00 


026" Pullman with cart wheels 


Ladies Reg. $72.00 


029" Pullman with cart wheels. 


5240 
$9560. 
928} 
. 536: 
$430 
$5750 


Fashion Colors: 


“Meadow Green, Clay R 
Men's "Dusk Grey’ 


TWO SUITER 


$52 00 54 1 se 
Shop Our Complete 


SCOUT DEP’T. 


eGIRLS e BROWNIES 
e@BOYS CUBS 


ed, Mountain Blue 
Men's "Dusk Grey" 


THREE SUITER 


With Cart Wheels 
Reg. 
$62.00 $qgee 
TIMEX . 


WATCH REPAIR 


Guaranteed 6 Months 
REASONABLE 


Charles Rancher 
Ll 


Janice Patton . 
Lola Fisher 
G 


Virginia Cornett . 
Merchants 
Ed Denton . 
Bill Parker a 
Spotlites 
Wayne Wayne 
Randy Choat .... 
‘Quad-City Handicap _ 
Ken Rapp . 
Ray Landys 
Late Owls 
Sandra Pumphrey 
Tri-Mor 
Queen B’s 
Mable Carter 
Industrial Men 
Jim Cobb........... 


195, 552 


-234, 613 


Incumbents 
filefor — 
school posts 


Filing for School Board seats 
in the three districts of the 
Quad-City area opened Wed- 
nesday with incumbents leading 
the filing in all three districts. 

Petitions as candidates for 
board seats will be received at 
the administration offices of the 
Granite City, Madison and 
Venice school districts through 
March 17. Petition forms are 
available at the board offices. 

Two board seats are open in 
the April 8 school election in 
Granite City District 9. Both 
incumbents whose terms expire 
this year filed petitions of 
candidacy yesterday. 

They are L. Monroe Worthen 
and Thomas G. Miofsky. 
Miofsky is now president of the 
board. 

In Madison, where three 
members are to be elected, 
Richard Zeisset and Elvers 
Johnson, both incumbents, filed 
petitions as filing opened at the 
respective board offices 
Wednesday. 

David Miskelly is the third 
member whose term expires 
this year. Johnson seeks 
election toa remaining one year 
of a term in which he now is 
serving by appointment. 

Two incumbents also filed 
petitions of candidacy in Venice 
District 3, John Boushard and 
Jerry Cicio, both of whom are 
seeking full three-year terms. 

A third opening in Venice with 
one-year of the term remaining 
also is open. That post now is 
held by George Wade who was 
appointed to the unexpired term 
of Jackie Leatherman. 


Aung Myint 
dies. suddenly 


Aung Myint, 57, of 2005 Rich- 
mond Ave., suffered an ap- 
parant heart attack while 
runing laps in an exercise 
program at the Tri-Cities 
YMCA at 12:18 p.m. Wednesday 
and was taken by ambulance to 
St. Elizabeth Hospital where he 
was pronounced dead at 1:06 
p.m. 

There will be an inquiry to 
determine the cause of death. 

He was born in Burma and 
resided in Glen Carbon before 
moving to Granite City seven 
years ago. 

Mr. Myint was employed as a 
turbin engineer at Granite City 
Steel, where he had worked 23 
years. 

He was a member of 
Steelworkers Local 30, Parents 
Without Partners Club, YMCA 
and active in the Boy Scouts. 

He was a past president of the 
Glen Carbon Kiwanis Club and 
a former city counselor and 
police officer in Glen Carbon. 
Mr. Myint held a master’s 
degree in education. 

Survivors include four sons, 
Reginald Myint of Hemet, 
Calif., Jonathan Myint of San 
Diego, Calif., James) and 
Andrew Myint, both of Granite 
City; one daughter, Mrs. 
William — (Nancy) Craig, 
Palmyra, Ill; a brother, San 
Hla of University City, Mo.; and 
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
James Duncan (Dawthi) 
Thompson of Burma. 

Funeral arrangements are 
given in the obituary column. 


Mercer | 


2NLA16 Niedringhous Avenue 
AD cronito city. ttinois 
PHONE 876-4321 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs.. Feb. 23, 1978 Page 4 


Drug abuse still problem 


(First in a series by the 
Granite City police.) 
If you are an average 
American the chances are you 
feel the problem of drug abuse 


bituaries 


BAKER, MRS. ROSIE 
(Knockl), °1432 Sixth St., 
Madison. Entered into rest 4:07 
p.m. Monday, Feb. 20, 1978, at 
Oliver Anderson Hospital, 
Mai 

Dear mother of John Auer; 


dear daughter of Mrs. Maria . 


Knockl; dear grandmother, 
mother-in-law and aunt. 
Funeral services were held at 
6 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 22, at 
SEDLACK FUNERAL HOME 
Chapel, 615 Madison Ave., 
Madison with the Rev. Paul J. 
Davis officiating. Private 
services were held today. 


DIXON, MRS. JULIA MAE 
(Simmons), Bourbonnais, Il. 
Entered into rest 7 p.m. Mon- 
day, Feb. 20, 1978, at. Bour- 
bonnais (I1.) Nursing Home. 

Beloved wife of the late Alfred 
Dixon; dear mother of Horace 
Dixon; dear sister of Thelwood, 
Owen, Artel, William and Cecil 
Simmons; dear grandmother 
and great-grandmother. 

Funeral services .1 p.m. 
today, Feb. 23, at LAHEY 
FUNERAL HOME Chapel, 501 
Madison Ave., Madison. 
Interment St. John Cemetery, 
2901 Nameoki Road. 

GOODMAN, ELVIN, 1257a 
Niedringhaus Ave. Entered into 
rest 2:55 a.m. today, Feb. 23, 
1978, at home. 

Beloved husband of Mrs. Ruth 
(Herrington) Goodman; dear 
father of Mrs. Sue Christopher, 
James, Michael and Anthony 
Goodman; dear brother of 
Kenneth dear 
grandfather great- 
grandfather. 

Funeral services 2 p.m. 
Saturday, Feb. 25, at DAVIS 
FUNERAL HOME Chapel, 21st 
Street and Cleveland 
Boulevard. Interment St. John 
Cemetery, 2901 Nameoki Road. 
Visitation after 2 p.m. Friday. 


HACKETHAL, JAMES E., 
Rural Route One, Worden, Ill., 
formerly of Mitchell. Entered 
into rest 10:45 p.m. Wednesday, 
Feb. 22, 1978, at Barnes 
Hospital, St. Louis. 

Beloved husband of Mrs. 
Mary i. (Chartrand) 
Hackethal, dear father of 
James and Dale Hackethal; 
dear brother of 
Lawrence, Bernard 
Maurice Hackethal, 
Loretta Krotz and Mrs. 
Gum. 

Funeral Mass 11:30 a.m. 
Saturday, Feb. 25, St. Boniface 
Catholic Church, Edwardsville 
from .WEBER FUNERAL 
HOME, 304 N. Main St., 
Edwardsville, where friends 
may call after 4 p.m. Friday. 
Interment Valley + View 
Cemetery, Edwardsville. 
Scripture service at 7 p.m. 
Friday. 


MYINT, AUNG, 2005 Rich- 
mond Ave. Entered into rest 
1:06 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 22, 
1978, 


Goodman; 
and 


and 
Mrs 
Pat 


Dear father of Reginald, 
Jonathan, James and Andrew 
Myint and Mrs. Nancy Craig; 
dear brother of San Hla; dear 
son of Mr. and Mrs. James 
Durican (Dawthi) Thompson. 

Funeral services 10 a.m. 
Saturday, Feb. 25, at BOB 
THOMAS MEMORIAL 
MORTUARY Chapel, 2205 
Pontoon Road. Interment 
Sunset Hill Cemetery, 
Edwardsville . Township, 
Visitation after 5 p.m. today. 


MONUMENTS 
SAMPSO! MONUMENT 


SALES 
an Sampson, Owner—656-1640 

|. R. ©, COW AROSVILLE, Iki. 
fonvorie Sunset Hills Cemetery 


Monuments 
and Markers 


LEAMING STOCK WORK 
RIVING CONSTANTLY 
OPEN SUNDAY 


COCAGNE 


Monument Works 
1711 State St. 


Chomas 


Mortuary 


“gy. 2205 Pontoon Road 
gas Granite City, Illinois 
PHONE 931-2121 


‘Smith Corp. 


Harry,” 


may have started to subside to 
the point you can stop worrying 
about it. Nothing could be 
farther from the truth. 

Drug abuse continues, 
radiating from large 
metropolitan communities to 
the suburbs and into rural 
areas. 

There have been leveling-off 
periods. During 1971, the U.S. 
was successful in convincing 
the Turkish, government to 
prohibit the growth of the opium 
poppy from which opium is 
made and ultimately heroin is 
produced. 

While Turkey did not actually 
produce the heroin—it was 
processed in other countries— 
she was responsible for-about 80 
percent of the heroin that wound 
up on US, illicit street markets 
during the late ’60s and early 
"70s. 

During the Turkish: 
prohibition, 1971-74; the effect 
was dramatic, with overdose 


deaths in this‘country dropping 
30 percent. Heroin ee 
on the streets dropped and 

U.S: addict ae alation 
decreased from an estimated 
500,000 to gbout 200,000. 
However, there was a’ later 
increase in the umber’ of 
heroin addicts to the area of 
600,000 to 800,000. 

While Turkey was out of the 
poppy business, Mexico, having 
previously supplied only about 
10 percent of the heroin needed 
to supply U.S. addicts, got into 
the business with renewed 
enthusiasm. Mexico began to 
produce about 60 percent of our 
heroin supply, prior to the new 
Turkish crop. ' 

Indicators point to the 
probability of a resurgence of 
the drug problem, not only with 
heroin but all of the other drugs 
of abuse; from marijuana on up. 

Next: How does a heroin 
addict get started? 


Elvin Goodman, 59, dies 


Elvin Goodman, 59, of 1257a 
Niedringhaus Ave., ill for 10 
years of a heart ailment, was 
pronounced dead at his home at 
2:55 a.m. today by William 
Sternberg, Madison County 
deputy coroner. 

Born in Camden, Tenn., Mr. 
Goodman resided in this area 23 
years. 

He had been employed as a 
welder for 15 years at A. O. 
prior to his 
retirement in 1967. 


Mr. Goodman was a member 
of the Baptist faith. 

, Survivors include his wife, 
Mrs. Ruth (Herrington) 
Gbodman; one daughter, Mrs. 
Nathan (Sue) Christopher, Big 
Sandy, Tenn.; three sons, 
James, Michael and Anthony 
Goodman, all of Granite City; 
one brother, Kenneth Goodman 
of St. Louis; seven grand- 
children and two great- 
grandchildren. 

Funeral arrangements are 
given in the obituary column. 


James Hackethal, 43, dies 


James E. Hackethal, 43, of 
Rural Route One, Worden, Ill, a 
native of Mitchell, died at 10:45 
p.m. Wednesday at Barnes 
Hospital, St. Louis. He had been 
ill three years. 

Mr. Hackethal was born in 
Mitchell and lived there as a 
child. He was employed as a 
truck driver for Richard’s Brick 
Co., in Edwardsville. 

A member of St. Boniface 
Catholic Church in Edwards- 
ville, Mr. Hackethal also held 
membership in Edwardsville 
Moose Lodge 1561. 

He is survived by his wife, 
Mrs. Mary L. (Chartrand) 
Hackethal; two sons, James 
and Dale Hackethal, both at 
home; four brothers, Harry and 
Lawrence. Hackethal of 
Edwardsville and Bernard and 
Maurice Hackethal of Glen 
Carbon; and two sisters, Mrs. 


Man arrested on 
burglary charge 


Demetrus Darrell Compton, 
27, of 1100 Calhoun St.,' Venice, 
was taken to the Madison 
County jail at8:30 a.m. today by 
Madison @ounty deputies on a 
charge of burglary. 

Bond has been set at $30,000 
by Judge Joseph Barr. 

Compton allegedly was hiding 
in a closet at the home ,of 
Beatrice Banks, 1024 Calhoun’ j 
St., early Sunday morning. 

Mrs. Banks.reported she was 
talking to a friend on the 
telephone and told the friend 
about finding some ashes on the 
floor, that a drawer was open 
and she was about to call the 
Police. 

At that point, a man came 
from inside a clothes closet, 
dashed through the house and 
out the door. Compton was 
arrested on a burglary charge 
by Venice police at 8:56 a.m. 
Wednesday near his home. 


Delmar (Loretta) Krotz of St. 
Jacob, Tl, and Mrs. Homer 
(Pat) Gum of Collinsville. 

Funeral arrangements are 
given in today’s obituary 
column. 


Births recorded at St. 

Elizabeth Hospital 

GIRLS 

Mr. and== Mrs. William 
Adelsberger, 708 N. 28th St., 
Feb. 20, Camilla Michelle, 
seven pounds, four ounces. 

Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Rongey, 
2204 W. 20th St., Feb. 20, 
Sandra Dawn, six pounds, 
eight ounces. 

Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Squires, 
3801 Lake Drive, Feb. 22, 
Kerri Renee, seven pounds, — 
five ounces. 

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Chan- 
dler, 2871 Washington Ave., 
Feb. 22, Michelle Antoinette, 
seven pounds, six ounces. 

BOYS 

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hayes, 
Granite City, Feb. 20, Jeffrey ' 
David, eight pounds, two and 
one half ounces. 

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baugh, 
2516 Grand Ave., Feb. 21, 
Edward Lee Jr., eight 
pounds, four ounces, 

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ratzkiewicz, 
Florissant, Mo., Feb. 22, 
Edward John, seven pounds, 
12 ounces. 


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: GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD Thur D. 23. 19s0 


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GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb.23,1978  Page6 


May need $1.6 million 


tax loan for GC schools 


The ‘Granite City Board of 
Education may have to sell 
about $1.6 million in tax an- 
ticipation, warrants in April, 
May and June, as was predicted 
in the current fiscal year 
budget, Tully Heubner, director 
of business affairs for the school 
district, told the board Tuesday 
night. 

Heubner said the district's 
cash flow has been about what 
he estimated in preparing the 
budget and, unless there are 
drastic changes, his initial 
estimate of a $1.6 million deficit 
will be about right by the middle 
of June, when tax distributions 
begin. 

He noted there are many 
variables which could increase 
or decrease the amount the 
district will have to borrow to 
meet operating expenses, so he 
will continue to provide the 


board with updated status 
reports 4s the changes occur. 

Variables include upcoming 
bills, the number of. teachers 
who request the balance of théir 
12-month pay at the end of the 
school year, transportation 
(bus) expenses, income other 
than from state aid, and state 
funds due. the district which 
may arrive earlier than ex- 
pected. 

Heubner estimated that to 
meet salaries and operating 
expenses, a tax anticipation 
warrant for about $185,000. will 
have to be sold about April 10, 

A second warrant for $150,000 
may be necessary May 1, anda 
$500,000 warrant may have to be 
sold about May 8. About May 29, 
the district may need a $200,000 
warrant and estimated needs 
for the week beginning June 5 
will likely require a $600,000 


warrant, Heubner estimated. 

The larger — warrants 
represent pay periods for 
teachers and. employees. Bills 
after the $600,000. runs out may 
be held over ‘until. taxes are 
received, he said. 

Heubner also noted between 
$150,000 and $200,000 is still due: 
from: the 1976 tax levy, but it is 
impossible to determine when 
those funds will be received, so 
they are not. included in his 
estimates. 


HUSBAND IS CHARGED 

Leo. R: Dougherty, 52, of 1711 
Maple Ave., was arrested at his 
home at 8:30 p.m: Monday and 
was charged, with battery on a 
complaint signed by his wife, 
Mrs. Helen- Dougherty. Mrs. 
Dougherty had bruises and 
alleged her husband struck her. 


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Eftimoff to serve- 


on telethon panel 


Mr. and-Mrs. Vasil Eftimoff, 
2800 Michigan Ave., will attend 
the annual Variety Club dinper 
in the Khorassan Room at the 
Chase-Park Plaza Hotel 
Saturday evening and the 
Variety Club telethon pf- 
terward. j 

Eftimoff will serve for *he 
sixth year on the VIP panel 
which answers _ telephéne 
callers, making pledges in ‘the 
opening» segment of the 
weekend telethon, to be aired on 
KSD-TV Channel 5. 

Monty Hall of “'Let’s Make a 
Deal,’’ a television game show, 
will, serve as - mastersof- 
ceremonies. 3 

The St. Louis Variety Club 
raises money for crippled 
children who are not otherwise 
serviced. “Sunshine Coachgs"’ 
which transport children. to 
therapy in area hospitals are a 
part-;of the Variety Club 
program. : 

Eftimoff is director of pupil- 
personnel services for the 
Granite City School District 
Special education is part of the 
educational area that he 
supervises and directs. 3 


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DEMOCRATIC HEADQUARTERS fér the March 
primary is opened .officially Tuesday afternoon by 
Michael J. Bakalis, second from left, gubernatorial 
candidate . On hand for the ribbpn°cutting, from ieft, 
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chairlady; Bakalis; 


Nelson Hagnauer, 


Democratic 


County Central Committee chairman, and Mayor Mike 
Sasyk of Madison. After the brief ceremony, Bakalis was 
introduced to those attending the opening and gave a 


summation of the campaign thus far. 


(Prese-Record Photo} 


Free hearing test 
today and Friday 


Quad-City area residents may 
receive free hearing 
examinations today and Friday. 

‘The Lions Foundation mobile 
hearing service unit is located 
today in the Gaslight Plaza 
Shopping Center, Wholesale 
Carpet Building, 4010 Pontoon 
Road, Pontoon ‘Beach, from 1 
p.m, until 4 p.mh. and from 5:30 
p.m, until 8:30 p.m. 

The unit is being sponsored by 
the Pontoon Beach Lions Club 


and assisted by the Pontoon 
Beach Lioness Club today. 

The Madison Lions Club will 
host the unit Friday at the 
Madison Fire station, 1529 Third, 
St., Madison, from 9 a.m. until 
noon and from 1:30 p.m. until 
4:30 p.m, 

The unit was in the First GC 
National Bank parking lot. 
Wednesday under sponsorship 
of the Granite City Lions Club 


Joseph Eskridge dies at home - 


Joseph Eskridge, 70, of 
Grenzer Homes, Madison, died 
at his home on Monday 

He was a retired employee of 
the Farmers Market 

Survivors include two 
daughters, Mrs. Claudette 


Gibson of St. Louis and Elysé 
Eskridge of Los Angeles, Calif. ; 
and a ‘sister, Mrs. Sarah 
Robinson of Okemos, Mich. 

Services will be held at 6 p.m 
today at an East St. Louis 
funeral home. 


Driver charged after crash 


George McNeal, 17, of 2130 
Grand Ave., was charged with 
reckless driving, not having a 
driver's license and resisting 
arrest after his car and the auto 
of James E. Goodrich, 47, of 
3116 Willow Ave., collided at 
Pontoon and Maryville roads at 
4:45 p.m, Tuesday 


Rotary chili 
day Feb. 28 


Ticket sales are continuing 
for Granite City Rotarians’ 
annual “‘chili day,” which will 
be held Tuesday, Feb. 28, at the 
Niedringhaus United Methodist 
Church, 20th Street and Delmar 
Avenue 

Serving is planned for 11:30 
a.m, to1:30 p.m., and then from 
5 to7 pm 


Hospital notes 


Patients admitted to St. 
Elizabeth Hospital Feb. 21: 

Mary Keel, Granite City; 
Joyce Thomason, GC; Jon Brett 
Boerm, Collinsville; Jack 
Johnson, GC; Nancy Squires, 
GC. . 

Dorothy Flowers, GC; 
Margaret Schoenhardt, GC; H. 
E. VanHuss, GC; Carl Storer, 
Troy; Virginia Lake, Gi 
Mildred Hale, GC; Peggy 
Burks, GC; Fred Clark, GC. 

Admitted Feb: 20: 

Barbara Staggs, Granite 
City; Sherilyn Orahood, GC; 
Audrey Ellis, Madison; Alfred 
Cummings, GC; Betty Alfaro, 
GC; Esther Ruth Moore, GC; 
Roberta Alexander, GC; 
Barbara Schwertmann, GC. 


Kenneth Mayland, 21, of 2033 
Madison Ave., a passenger in 
McNeal's auto, was seriously 
injured in the accident and wag 
taken to St. Elizabeth Hospital 
and then transferred to Firmirj 
Desloge Hospital, St. Louis; 
with a puncture wound to his 
forehead and.an injury to hig ~ 
right leg : 

Witnesses alleged McNeal’g 
auto, Was westbound at a high 
rate of speed and forced other 
cars off the roadway beforé 
striking the rear of Goodrich’s 
auto. Goodrich received minor 
injuries which did not requiré 
hospital treatment. 

When police arrived, McNeal 
allegedly became abusive and 
tried to push an officer away: 
Some force was required to get 
him in a squad car, officers 
alleged. : 


Faces 5 charges: 


Raymond G. Davall, 32, of 
2596 E, 27th St., faces five 
traffic charges - after his! 
westbound auto allegedly 
violated the stop sign on 23rd 
Street at Adams Street, crossed: 
Adams, ran through the double 
gates at the Granite City Street 
garage and struck the city 
building. . 

He was charged with driving’ 
while under the influence of 
alcohol, violating a stop sign; , 
damaging city property,’ 
driving while his driver's 
license was suspended and not 
having valid registration for hig 
auto. _ * 


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Players melodrama tonight, Friday 


The final two performances of 
“gad, The Woman in White” 
by the East Bank Players, will 
be tonight and Friday, both 
starting at 8:15, at the Polish 
Hall, 826 Greenwood St., 
Madison. 

Tickets costing $3 for adults 
and $2 for senior citizens and 
students may be purchased at 
the door, of at 50 cent discount if 
obtained in advance. 

Directed by Gene Cassy, who 
also playsdhe slippery ne’er do 
well villain, the old fashioned 
melodrama is presented, in 
‘updated style,’” 

The cast includes newcomers 
to the East Bank stage, together 
with seasoned veterans, such as 
Cassy, who has been with East 
Bank since its formation. 

In addition to the melodrama 
itself, a series of olios (medley 
of skits) is presented during 


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scene changes, giving the 
audience continuous en- 
tertainment. 

Cast in the principal roles 
are: 

Cassy as Sir Pervical Glyde; 
Anne Fuller as Dora; Tom 
Earls, Lawyer Gilmore; 
Elizabeth Sheble, Countess 
Fosco; Elvera Herman, Mrs. 
Cathrick; Mary arls, 
Fredericka Fairlee; Carol 
McGee, Marian; Leah Rogers, 
Laura; Dan McGee, Walter 
Hartright; and Ruth Bradley, 
Miss Peach. 

Behind the scenes personnel 
are Ann Scott, assistant 
director; Stanley Stewart, 
special makeup consultant; 
Jeanne Fuller, stage manager; 
David Mendoza, Tony Becerra 
and Michelle Meehan, stage 
crew. 

Carol and Dan McGee, Cathy 
and Gene Cassy, David Men- 
doza and Tony Becerra, set 
construction; Dan McGee, 
publicity; Laura Antoff, Debbie 
Thick and Cathy Cassy, tickets; 
who 
designed and made the costume 
worn by Countess Fosco. 


“FIENDISH PLANS” for sweet Laura (Leah Rogers), 
the‘heroine, are voiced by the slippery villain Sir 
Percival Glyde (Gene Cassy) in a scene for the East Bank 
Players’ show, “Egad, The Woman in White,” an old 
fashioned melodrama being presented tonight and 
Friday at 8:15 in the Polish Hall, 826 Greenwood St., 
Madison. The public may obtain tickets at the door. 


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Quartet to be 
featured on 


Harmony Show 


Male Delivery, a barbershop 
quartet, will be featured guest 
on the ninth annual Barbershop 
Harmony Show, ‘Those Good 
Old Days,” to be presented by 
the Mississippi Valley Bar- 
bershop Chorus, local chapter 
of the Society for the Preser- 
vation and’ Encouragement, of 
Barbershop Quartet Singing in 
America (SPEBSQSA). 

Two shows will be presented; 
the first at Webster Junior High 
in Collinsville, March 4 at 8 p.m. 
and the second at Granite City 
High School South, March 5 at 2 
p.m. 

Quartet members, Rich Pilch 
of Granite City, Bob Cearnal of 
Mascoutah, Eldred Mueller of 
Okawville and Lyle Wilson of 
Waterloo, provide the sounds of 


» old-time, four-part harmony to 


provide fun and entertainment 


, for all ages, officers said. 


Tickets: are available from 
any barbershopper or at the 
door. Senior citizens will be 
given a $1 discount on general 
admission tickets. 


a 


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MALE DELIVERY, barbershop quartet to be featured guest on the ninth annual 
Barbershop Harmony Show, “Those Good Old Days,” which is to be presented by the 
Mississippi Valley Chorus at Webster Junior High in Collinsville on March 4 at 8 p.m. and 


at Granite City High School South on March 5 at 2 p.m. Left to right, Rich Pilch of 
Granite City, Bob Cearnal of Mascoutah, Eldred Mueller of Okawville and Lyle Wilson 
of Waterloo. The Mississippi Valley Chorus is the area chapter of the Society for the 
Preservation and Encouragement of ‘Barbershop Quartet Singing in America 
(SPEBSQSA) and meets every Monday evening in the Community Room of Collinsville 


Building & Loan on Belt Line Avenue in Collinsville. 
- New TV shop 
opens here 


A new business, Budget TV 
and Stereo, has opened at 1417 
Twenty-first St. in downtown. 
Granite City, 

The new Store offers complete 
repair service on all makes and 
models of televisions. The shop 
also offers service on stereo 
turntables, radios and citizen 
band radios. 

Bill Steefel, operator of the 
store, has 12 years experience 
and said that all parts and 
service are guaranteed. 

The shop offers one-day 
service. 

Infermation concerning 
repairs and other serivces may 
be obtained by phoning 877-8768 
or 877-8769, Steefel said. 


Children's Dental 
Health Week to be 
observed in county 


Children's National Dental 
Health Week will be observed 
next week, Feb. 25 through 
March 4, with a program for 
Madison County students to be 
held in Alton from 9 a.m. to 3 
p.m. Saturday. 

A feature of the program to be 
held at Mineral Springs Mall on 
Broadway in Alton will be the 
judging of a poster contest for 
seventh, eighth and ninth grade 
pupils in Madison, Calhoun, 
Green, Jersey and Bond 
counties. 

A first-place prize of $100 will 
be awarded. Second prize will 
be $50 and third and fourth- 
place prizes will be $25 each. 

Poster materials will be made 
available at the Saturday event 
by the American Dental Society 
and the Dairy Council. All 
children have been invited to 
attend. Students, faculty and 
hygienists of the Southern 
Illinois University Dental 
School will present a program 
on preventive dentistry for 
children. 

Dr. Shahrenes Ghoneim of 
Wood River and an associate 
professor at SIUE is in charge 
of public relations for the ob- 
servance. Dr. Curtis Berry, 
president of the Madison County 
Dental Society also is helping 
sponsor the program. 


VENICE FIRE AID 

Granite City and Venice 
firemen responded to a fire 
recently at Apex Oil Co., and 
kept the fire from causing any 
damage. A previous article 
saying Granite City and 
Madison firemen answered the 
alarm was in error. 


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Cannabis charge 


Frank M. Townsend, 24, of 
2444 lowa St., was charged with 
possession of cannabis and 
driving while under the in- 
fluence of liquor or drugs after 
police stopped his car at Kate 
and Edwards streets at 3:05 
a.m, Wednesday. 

Officers alleged they noticed 
his car driven erratically and 
weaving from lane to lane on 
East 24th Street. They used red 
lights on the squad car and 
followed the auto to where it 
spun out of control on Kate 
Street, narrowly missing a 
parked car 

The auto was searched &nd 
police alleged finding a 
marijuana cigarette on the 
floorboard. 


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GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb.23,1978  Page8 


Ambulance contract 
terms ok’'d by city 


The Granite City Council 
Tuesday night approved a 
tentative contract for providing 
ambulance service to Quad-City 
area townships, 
cities outside of Granite City. 

The .contracts must ° be 
ratified by the various govern- 
mental bodies outside of the city 
if Granite City ambulances are 
to continue to serve those areas 
after March 15. 

The contracts have been 
presented to Nameoki, 
Chouteau and Venice town- 
ships, Madison and Venice and 
Pontoon Beach and are being 
studied by those town and 
village boards and city councils. 

Basically, the contracts 


assuré the city that ambulance: 


calls outside of the city will be 
paid for by the township, village 
and city, if collection attempts 
by the city’are unsuccessful. 
City Attorney Lance Callis 
has said federal grants paying 
the salaries of city ambulance 
personnel will run out March 15 
and it would be illegal after that 
date for the city taxpayers to 


village and 


subsidize ambulance runs 
outside the city which do not 
“break even.” 

‘The agreement is that the city 
will attempt to collect the bills 
for 90 days, after which they 
would be turned over to the 
governmental unit responsible 
for the area to which the am- 
bulance run was made. That 
body would then have 30 days to 
pay the bill. 

Ambulance runs outside of 
the city will cost $70, plus $1 for 
each mile covered while a 
patient is in the ambulance 

The tenative contracts are for 
one year and may be ter- 
minated by either the city or the 
outside governmental unit on 30 
days written notice 

A meeting between city of- 
ficials and authorities of the 
outlying townships, village and 
city is to be called in the near 
future to discuss the contracts 
and seek final agreements. 

Several of the governmental 
units already have indicated 
they will sign thd contracts with 
the city, in order to keep the 





Sewer bids 


(Continued from Page 1) 


occurred and the cost had risen, 
it might have been difficult to 
arrange an adequate financing 
combination within the time 
made available by the EPA. 

Counting all costs, the project 
has been estimated at $18 
million to $19 million 

The contractors gave their 
decision yesterday at a meeting 
attended by the committee and 
Engineer Edward Juneau and 
Attorneys Harry E. Hartman 
and Larry Calvo. 

Committee Chairman Walter 
“Dick” Sparks, supervisor of 
Chouteau Township, voiced 
appreciation to many persons 
whithout whose cooperation the 
mammoth project could not 
have been brought to a com- 
pletion. 

Among those gambling on the 
eventual success were abstract 
companies that advanced 
recording fees and title search 
costs, 

The network of sewers is to 
sweep through populated areas 
of Chouteau, Nameoki and 

__Venice townships and the Tri- 
City Regional Port area to 
connect with the primary 
secondary sewage treatment 
plant of the City of Granite city. 

Yesterday is being described 
by some as ‘‘a- tremendous day 
in the history of the Quad- 
Cities,’’ since the sewer project 
\is expected to spark residential, 
commercial and industrial 
growth, including along 
Interstate 270. 

Some who are to be served by 


Te 


sewers opposed general 
obligation bond usage and 
fought a court battle, which was 
ended Jan. 26 by the Illinois 
Supreme Court. 

The 18 
categories are: 

Interceptor sewers from the 
western Granite City limits to 
the Chain of Rocks Canal. 

Collector sewers from 1-270 
and West Chain of Rocks north 
along the canal. 

Collector sewers between 
Mitchell and 270-West Chain of 
Rocks. 

“1A” collector sewers and “B”” 
interceptors north of the 
Granite City limits and west of 
Route 203. 
~ “A” collectors and “B" in- 
terceptors north of the city 
limits from Route 203 to the 
Alton & Southern railroad 
tracks. 

“A” collectors and “B” in- 
terceptors west of Mitchell and 
north on Route 203. 

“A” collectors and “B” 
terceptor sewers in most 
Mitchell 

“A” collectors and “B’’ in- 
terceptors in all of Pontoon 
Beach and northwest around 
Long Lake to the southern edge 
of Mitchell, 

Collector sewers in the 
southeast corner of the project 
just east of the Granite City 
limits. 

Collector sewers from Locks 
27 to Route Three at the A. O. 
Smith Corp 

And three lift station projects. 


construction 


in- 
of 


%, 


SINCE 1907 


ambulance service after March 


15. 

It was emphasized at Tuesday 
night’s city-council meeting that 
city ambulance _ service 
definitely will halt after that 
date to any area which does not 
have a contract with the city. 

Such areas would have to rely 
upon private ambulance ser- 
vice, which are considered by 
most to be inadequate to serve 
the entire Quad-City area. 


Rites held for 
Sime Cooley 


Funeral services were con- 
ducted at 7 p.m. Wednesday at 
an East St. Louis funeral home 
for Sime Cooley, 62, of 500 
Meredocia St., Venice, who died 
of injuries sustained while 
working at the International 
Mill Service, 22nd Street and 
Edwardsville Road, Saturday, 
Feb. 18. 

He allegedly was hit by a bull 
dozer and was taken to St. 
Elizabeth Hospital where he 
was admitted with internal 
bleeding at 10:20 a.m. Saturday. 
Mr. Cooley died while un- 
dergoing surgery at 12:35 p.m. 

Survivors include his wife, 
Gracie; daughters, Mrs. Katie 
Washington of Los Angeles and 
Peggy Cooley of Harvey, Ill., 
and Mrs. Fannie Dumas of 
Edwardsville; a brother, Buddy 
of Laurel, Miss.; and sisters, 
Sweetie Mae Cooley of New 
Orleans, La., and Eloise Cooley 
of Laurel, Miss. 

Mr. Cooley was a World War 
II veteran. 


Disarm man of 
bow and arrows 


“Lay down your bow and 
arrows’’ was the order of 
Madison police as they an- 
swered a disturbance call at 909 
Jefferson St. at 9:30 a.m. 
Tuesday. 

Lloyd Hemingway, 46, of 811 
Jackson St., Madison, complied 
and dropped a cross-bow and 
four arrows, police said. 

Hemingway was charged 
with disorderly conduct and 
released on $50 cash bond to 
appear in court on March 30 at 1 
p.m, 


HEAR GC CAMPAIGN 

Earl Baker, Sixth Ward 
alderman, and Stephen Saltich 
have been appointed as co- 
chairmen of the Granite City 
campaign’ for Bill Johnson, 
Dem atic candidate for 
circuit judge. The appointments 
were announced by Paul R. 
Bowler, chairman of the 
Madison County campaign for 
Johnson. 


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BIG BELL 
SMALL BELL 


SADDLEMAN’S BOOT CUT 
NUVO FASHION COLORS 


PRE-WASHED DENIMS 


‘STYLES 
FABRICS 


BOOT CUT FLARES 


Street workers 
(Continued from Page 1) 


Decatur told the council in 
submitting the _ newly- 


for BAC 
negotiated agreement. that 


President — westisted, screcment. ins: 


New contracts were approved’ agreed to trade the-third-year 
by the Board of Trustees last’ pay raise reduction of 5 percent 
week for Belleville Area College: in return for the longevity pay 
administrators. * scale, 

One-year contracts were: ‘The money difference 
extended for Robert Eskridge,,| between the 8.5 percent pay 
Frank Gornick, James Hines, |- raise and the 3.5 percent raise 
Larry Schmalenberger, Doris® the third year of the 
Slocum, Patricia Talley and* agreement will make up the 
Eugen Verdu. cost of longevity pay for that 


New pact 


Two-year contracts were 
extended to James Burkett, © 
Gunner Christensen, ~Wayne + 
Clark, Lloyd Gentry, Vince 
Margerum, Ray Moddrell, + 
Michael Moore, Warren = 
Nieburg, Gordon Stone, Weldon 
Tallant and Clyde Washburn. 

Dr. William R. 
president of the college, was 
given a new three-year con- 
tract, effictive through 1981. 

Two -Belleville Area College 
instructors were granted one- 
semester. sabbatical leave. 

Christopher Niemann, of the 
Department of Physical and 
Mathematical, Sciences, will 
take a semester and complete 
work on his Ph.D degree. 

Dale Threlkeld, instructor in 
the Art Department, will spend 


a semester doing research and, 

-department 
{Thomas 
‘missioner of the U.S. Con- 
‘ciliation and Mediation Service 


study in major art centers of the 
nation and preparing new in- 
structional materials. 

‘Twenty-four-year-old Karen 
Robinson was seated as interim 
student representative to the 
BAC Board of Trustees at the 
meeting. 

Mrs. Robinson resides with 
her husband in Belleville. They 
are the parents of a daughter. 

Mrs. Robinson is an English- 
journalism major and is co- 
editor of “The Dutchman,” 
BAC’s student newspaper. 

Her present plans are to 
transfer to McKendree College 
after completing her work at | 
Belleville Area College. She + 
expressed a desire to run for the 
regular representative seat © 
when student elections are held - 
in April. 

Dale Randles, an English 
instructor at BAC, has resigned. | 
He has been on a leave of ab- ; 
sence for the last year because | 
of health reasons. i 


In submitting his resignation, > 


Randles explained that he has » 
bought a business. in New ° 
Mexico, where he has been > 
living, and will remain in that ; 
area. £ 

The Board of Trustees also ' 
accepted the resignation of | 
Thelma Phillips. 


An instructor in the BAC + 


Department of Business since 
1965, she is retiring, Prior to her , 
position at Belleville Area } 
College, she taught at Centralia 
College. 

President Keel said, ‘Miss | 
Phillips has taught for 42 years. 
She has made an outstanding ; 
contribution as a teacher, and 7 
we accept her resignation with 
regret.” 

John M. Silvester, presently 
Belleville Area College’s 
director of veterans’ affairs, 
has been named assistant 
director of the Region 15 Career 
Guidance Center, administered 
by BAC. Silvester’s salary was 
set at $1,494 monthly. 

Other personnel hired for the 
center were Deborah Youngs, 
programmer, and Judith Pritz, 
secretary. 

The Guidance Center will 
provide professional | 
development for area coun- 
selors as well as vocational and 
personal guidance for youths © 
and adults. f 

It will be particularly con- } 
cerned with vocational coun- 
seling for women who are! 
seeking non-traditional jobs, ; 
youths in correctional 
stitutions, 
retiring early, 
limited English 
ability, and those who are en- > 
tering the job market or” 
changing jobs late in life. 

The center is funded through , 
a federal grant. 

The regular March meeting of 
the BAC board will be held in 
Collinsville. The 8 p.m. March‘ 
16 meeting will be in the board’ 
meeting room of the Collinsville 
school district, 201 W. Clay St. | 

David Viar, — executiv 
director of the Tllinois Com-: 
munity College’ ‘Trustees + 


Keel, - 
now get six weeks vacation 
jafter 20 years service, the 
- longest vacation schedule now 


{Sam Whitmer, 
| Gerald Parmley, 
| Douglas and Paul Bowler. 
: Aldermen Clyde Boyd and Glen 
: Sprankle were absent. 


year,” Decatur said. 

In addition, the new 
agreement provides that 
vacations for street department 
workers will be reduced by one 
week on May 1, 1979, in the 
same plan effective in the police 
and fire departments. 

Street department workers 


in effect in any department. 


iThis will convert in 1979 to five 


weeks after 15 years, the same 


‘schedule provided police and 
\firemen in the new three-year 
agreements. 

# Decatur told the counej} that 


the agreement was worked out 
last week. in a mediation session 
attended by city negotiators and 
representatives of the street 
unions with 
O’Brien, a com- 


Attending that session for the 
city were Decatur, Aldermen 
Ronald Coleman and Fred 


. “Pat” Schuman Jr.; City Clerk 
| Robert Stevens, City Treasurer 


Nick Petrillo and Street 


_ Superintendent Lionel Portell. 


Representing the employees 


f.were Arthur Griffin and Jim 
;Cavaness of 


the Laborers 
Union, David McFarland and 
Joseph Crider of the Teamsters 
Union and Carl Morris of the 
Painters Union. 

The longevity schedule 
provided in the past sets up a 
schedule of pay raises 
amounting to4 percent after the 


{ first year of service, 5 percent 


after five years, 7 percent after 
10 years and 8 percent after 15 
years. 

Also included in the new pact 
is a provision that all present 
working foremen will become 
non-working foremen who shall 
receive 50 cents per hour above 
the base pay, effective this 
week. 

Non-working foremen will be 
permitted to work when 
training other employees, and- 
or in emergency situations. 

The agreement also provides 
that extra mien or temporary 
men shall be classified as 
temporary for a maximum 
period of eight weeks. Such 


} employees who are retained 


after eight weeks shall become 
entitled to all benefits due 
employees under _ the 
agreement. 

‘Approval of the agreement 


, carried by a vote of 10 to 2 with 
* negative votes cast by Alder- 
{men Lloyd Bailey and Mrs. 


Margaret Nonn. 

Those voting in favor were 
Decatur, Schuman, Coleman, 
Roy Poulos, Everett Morlen, 
Earl Baker, 
Charles 


In related actions Tuesday 


4 night, the council by unanimous 


votes approved salary increase 
ordinances for ‘the police and 
fire departments. 

The ordinances provide 
salary increases of 6 percent 
this year, 8 percent for the 1978- 


| 79 year and 8.5 percent for the 


1979-80 fiscal year. 

In answer to an inquiry by 
several aldermen, City Clerk 
Robert Stevens assured the 
council that all salary raises 
have been figured on the basis 
of individual salaries and not on 
an average figure. 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 


YOUNG SUPPORTER. Roland Niederkorn, 


13, 


left, shakes hands with 


gubernatorial candidate Michael J. Bakalis in the Madison County Democratic 
headquarters Tuesday afternoon. The Press-Record newsboy was the youngest supporter 
to attend the opening of the party’s headquarters at 21 Nameoki Village Shopping 
Center. The Coolidge Junior High seventh grader was knowledgable of the area politics 
and politicians and worked for many of the candidates in the last general election. He 
critiqued Bakalis as being “young, bright” and having the “right image” to win the 
election in November. He also referred to Bakalis as “governor” because he is sure 


“he'll win.” 


(Prest-Record Photo) 





returned to the United States 
before I was 18 years old. 

“After réading your weekly, 
one-sided views of me, I feel 
compelled to defend myself. I 
realize Mr. Toffant is the Press- 
Record’s endorsed candidate 
for sheriff, but I sincerely doubt 
that he approves of this one- 
sided news media because I 
know him to be a just and 
honorable man. 

“I would like to clear the air 
about certain articles you have 
ridiculed me about during my 
tenure as road commissioner. 
The 24-inch pipe that I bought 
and saved the township $2,000 
was installed at the intersection 
of Rapp Road and Lakeview 
Drive to replace a 10-inch pipe 
that stopped up every time it 
rained. This was necessary to 
drain the area known as Tank 
Town. 

“I bought salt from Mr. 
Stoltz, a resident of Chouteau 
Township, for $10 a ton when 
other cities were paying $20 a 
ton 

“Mr. Stoltz was in the 
blacktop business. He stored his 
roller at the Township Garage 


EMIL TOFFANT 
A GOOD 


Estes 


(Continued from Page 1) 


and, in return, we used it on 
many occasions. on township 
roads free of charge. 

“He called me and asked me 
to drop his roller off at 2405 
Jerden Ave. where he had a job. 
I did just that; 1 dropped it off — 
a darn small favor for the 
benefits we received from its 
ust 

“You stated that some 
woman bought gas on a credit 
card. I never had a credit card 
and neither did the township 
highway department. 

“I have never defrauded, 
cheated or wronged anyone. 
Mr. Sparks, for political 
reasons, did everything he 
could to make me look bad and, 
with the newspaper’s help, I 
suppose he succeeded. 

“But in spite of him I still had 
the best roads and one of the 
lowest budgets in Madison 
County. 

“I ran for sheriff seven years 
ago on my own and was almost 
elected. If I had received a 
deserving break from your 
paper, I feel I would have won. 

“I am a Democrat; I have 
always been a Democrat. 


POLICEMAN 


A Goop TEAM 


VOTE — MARCH 21, 1978 — DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY 


PAID FOR BY COMMITTEE TO Ki 


ANDY MATOESIAN AS CIRCUIT 


CHAIRMAN, 52 OAKLAWN, GRANITE CITY, ILLINOIS 62040. 


February 15, 1978 


“I am endorsed by the 
Democratic Central Committee 
and I am proud of it. 

“If honesty,’ integrity, 
compassion and caring for my 
fellow man mean anything 
anymore, I will be the next 
sheriff of Madison County. 

“In closing, allow me to say 
that I don’t know what I did tq 
make this newspaper so bitter. 
It must be that I am a true and 
Toyal Democrat. 

“I honestly, sincerely, and 
with no hatred in my heart, 
believe that you are doing a 
disservice to yourself, your 
paper and, more importantly, to 
your readers, 

“This is the first and last 
letter I intend to write to you. I 
have neither the funds nor the 
desire to carry on a weekly war 
of words with your paper, I will 
put my faith in those who know 
me and the voters of Madison 
County.’ 

“I would hope that you would 
give the same priority in your 
newspaper to my letter that you 
have given to your articles 
which have attempted to 
discredit me.” 


ANDY MATOESIAN 


A GOOD 


JUDGE 


JUDGE. DR. ALBERT W. TRTANJ, 


ae iam 


NEW 7 


© OVER ‘4 DOZEN 
OF AMERICA'S TOP BRANDS 
@ALLAT 
DISCOUNT PRICES 
© FROM 12°" COMPARE AT *20 
‘JUNIOR FASHIONS 
‘@WAIST SIZES FOR OUTSTANDING 
SELECTIONS 8 FIT 


COLORS ILLINOIS STATE BAR ASSOCIATION 


@HEAVY WEIGHT 
UNWASHED 

@S-T-R-E-T-C-H DENIM 

PRE WASHED 

POLYESTER AND COTTON 
PERMAPRESS IN COLORS 


eDOUBLE KNITS 


Association, is expected to be * 
present at that meeting. 


COMMITTEE ON JUDICIAL ADVISORY POLLS 


Mrs. Miller 
dies at 79 


Mrs. Nealia Miller, 79, of 5543 
Avon Place, East St. Louis, died , 
at St. Mary’s Hospital, East St. 
Louis, Monday, Feb. 20. 

Services will be conducted at" 
8 p.m. Sunday at the New Salem) 
Baptist Church, Venice. F 


Andy Matoesian,. 
2836 State St. 
Granite City, 


Esq. 


IL 62040 


A judicial advisory poll has just been. completed on all judicial 
candidates in the March 21 primary election outside of Coox’' 
County. As a courtesy to you, we are providing the following 


DOROYS : 
results-of the poll as they related to your candidacy. 


eKAHKIS 


\pattlovs- 
- SINCE 1907" 


NAMEOKI VILLAGE 877-1506 


GRANITE City. 


QUALITY-FASHION-VALUE “Va '@& 


CKETS 9 
JEAN JACTS From 3 RTs. 
4 TOPS. NTS: 


OM WESTERNS 


Total 
Results 


Unaffiliated 
Results 


Republican 
Results 


Democrat 
Results 


Ballots 
Returned 


Ballots 
Mai Feds 


Hurt in fall 


Michael Avouske, 25; 
Caseyville, was injured in a fi 
at American Steel Foundries ai 
3 p.m. was 
sferred from St. Elizabet! 


Hospital to 
Hospital, St. Louis, with 
injuries. : 


59 
R 


29 
R 


164 76 


R 


250 
R 


This information will be mailed to the news media for reléase on 


February 22, 1978. R - Recommended 
_« ,(NR ~ Not Recommended 


Sincerely. ‘ 





Many will miss ‘Dr. Mike’ 


By GARY SCHNEIDER 
Press-Record Staff Writer 
“Doctor Mike" is leaving St. 
Elizabeth Hospital and a great 
he People are going to miss 
‘im: 


Michael Levine, MR, the 29- 
year-old medical director of 
emergency services of St. 
Elizabeth “Hospital, has ac- 
cepted a sthff position in the 
emergency room of St. John’s 
Mercy: Hospital in Town and 
Country, Mo., and will be 
leaving the emergency room 
here early next month. 

He may not talk like the 
Stereotyped doctor, but there 
are hundreds of persons in the 
Quad-City area who can attest 
that “Dr. Mike” was a good 
doctor to them, including a 71- 
year-old man who was stabbed 
and was nearly dead from loss 
of blood when he reached the 
emergency room. He is healthy 
t 


Ask the mother of two small 
children who were found nearly 
asphyxiated during a fire in 
their apartment building last 
month if Dr. Mike will be 
missed. 

“They were super-sick kids. I 
took smoke, ashes and crud out 
of their lungs which looked like 
tar, but I said I am not going to 
let them go and they are alive 
and out of the hospital today,” 
Dr. Levine recalled: 

Another woman is alive today 
after drinking two quarts of 
Chlorodane, a potent and 
concentrated bug spray, due, in 
great part to the emergency 
care she received from Dr. 
Levine. 

“T have a basic rule here, and 
that is nobody dies down here. 
Damn few do. I think we have a 
very good record of: taking 
people who are super sick and 
bringing them out,’’ he noted 

Many who know Dr. Levine 
feel he has a great ability to get 
to know people fast and has no 
trouble expressing his feelings. 
After examining one elderly 
woman, he stated, “This is the 
kind of woman who could walk 
around with a truck on her foot 
and not complain.’’ 

Asked if he feels his manner 
in talking to patients and 
families fits in the mood of most 
hospital situations, Dr. Levine 
commented, ‘‘Medicine has 
been held back for many years 
by the idea physicians cannot be 
people. They must be something 
more. 

“My knowledge of people did 
not come from medical school. 
It came from working as a 
security guard, a construction 


BELLEMORE ST 


worker, a maintenance man 
and a teacher. I think I got to 
know people pretty well and 
how to talk to them,” he said. 

-“T Jearned a long time ago 
that if ever you fail to get 
through toa patient and make 
him understand, it is your fault. 
There is no such thing as a 
damb patient,” he believes. 

“People have a right to be 
happy with their physician. 
They have a right to understand 
what is going on with their 
bodies and the right to make 
decisions concerning the care of 
their bodies. That is why it is so 
important for a physician’ to be 
able to communicate with his 
patients. My undergraduate 
studies were in speech and 
mass communications. I think 
that has helped me com- 
municate with people,” Dr. 
Levine said. 

“Talso think it is important 
for physicians to use common 
sense and have the ability to 
understand what it is like to 
look up from a hospital bed at 
a whole bunch of white coats 
wHo are determining your 
fate. 

“Once in a while you are 
going to lose a patient. We are in 
a business of dealing with a 
wide variety of illnesses and 
ailments and there are bound to 
be some super sickies. This is 
not always a pretty world and 
you are going to lose some. 

“A doctor cannot take the full 
blame for losing a patient. 
There is a very real thing called 
a will to live and some people 
just give up. 

“There are people alive in 
this community who should not 
be because of the things wrong 
with them; people who just will 
not give up, 

“The will to live is a part of 
something called living 
Sometimes you see people who 
are less alive in their 20s than 
people in their 80s who are 
really alive and loving every 
minute of it,'’ he stated. 

In addition to heading the 
emergency room staff at St. 
Elizabeth Hospital, Dr. Levine 
is a medical advisor for 
Belleville Area College, and is 
chairman of the medical ad- 
visory committee of the Illinois 
Heart Association for southern 
Madison County. 

While working on his medical 
degree at Wayne State 
University in Detroit, Mich., he 
served in one of the busiest 
emergency rooms in the United 
States. ‘We would handle bet- 
ween 180,000 to 300,000 cases a 
year and saw nearly 


ORE ONLY 


everything,”’ he recalls. 

He also was active in poison 
control and suicide prevention 
work in college. Prior to coming 
to St. Elizabeth Hospital just 
over one year ago, he trained at 
Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, 
served in the plastic surgery 
unit-and headed the burn unit. 

“Plastic surgery, as with any 
surgery, is very rewarding. You 
can see the patient change and 
get better immediately as a 
result of your work. Burn work, 
on the other hand, is slow and 
the patient is in a great deal of 
pain. A burn is probably the 
worst injury a human being can 
have,"’ he said. 

“The times when you know 
that you, as an individual, 
made a difference in a 
patient’s recovery or his 
pulling through, that is when 
it is really nice to be a doc- 
tor,” he added. 

One of Dr. Levine's first 
achievements at St. Elizabeth 
Hospital was to “restructure 
and rewrite the cardiac arrest 
(heart stoppage) team policies 
and procedures.”” 

He taught hundreds. of 
hospital employees how to deal 
with cardiac arrests and what 
to do until a physician arrives. 
“I hope I did some good. I feel 
we now have a smooth and 
modern method and procedure 
for dealing with heart attacks 
and arrests, using the most 
modern medicines and 
procedures,” he related. 

“T also feel we have excellent 
radiology and pathology 
departments which can get 
things done faster than at 
Barnes. Hospital. There are 
very many cooperative: and 
good people here and it is sad to 
be leaving. There are a lot of 
people I really like and will 
miss,” he added. 

Levine said he is leaving for 
several reasons, the major one 
being a four-minute drive to 
work from his West St. Louis 
County home. “I also am 
looking forward to shorter 
hours, having worked 60 hours a 
week here, from 6 a.m. to6 p.m. 
five days a week.” 

He also commented on the 
heavy workload for doctors in 
the emergency room here, 
primarily due to “the use of the 
emergency room as a doctor’s 
office by many ADC (Aid to 
Dependent Children and 
welfare) patients. I think ADC 
abuse is a major problem here. 

“People who refuse to get a 
private physician because ADC 
will pay the emergency room 
are doing themselves, and us, a 


SALE BEGINS FRIDAY 
FEB. 24 AT 9A.M. 


FRIDAY 9 ‘til 9 SATURDAY 9 til 6 


145 Slacks & Jeans 


186 Blouses 
208 T-Shirts 
108 Sweaters 


68 Pant Suits & Dresses 


104 Skirts 


210 Brushed Gowns & 


Pajamas 


26 Brushed & Quilted Robes 


76 Coordinated 
Sportswear 
87 Purses 


DR. MICHAEL LEVINE, medical director of eme: 


Tgency services at St. Elizabeth 


Hospital, who will be leaying, carly in March to accept an emergency room staff post at 


St. John’s Mercy Hospit 


|. His concern and compassion for patients and his straight- ‘ 


forward style of communication have made him popular with many during his service 


here. 


great disservice. First they tie) know how to deal even with 


up,,an emergency facility and/ diaper rash. We need to teach 
they get a lower grade of health; people what to expect and how 
care, because we canhot give? to deal with newborns. 


them the same service as a 
single physician who knows 
their history and sees them 
regularly. 

“I think it is absolutely 
intolerable for any patient to 
be in an emergency room 
more than an hour and a half, 
including treatment, for any 
reason,” he stated. 

Levine said he is very con- 
cerned about the health of the 
people in this area, particularly 
where dangers to their health 
can be avoided. 

“T hate to see dirty and 
mistreated children and I hate 


to see children who have not : 
against { 
Those who do not: 


been immunized 
disease. 


immunize their children are 


being negligent, and that is the 


only word for it,”’ he stated. 


“T am very concerned every ° 


time we send a baby home with 


parents who do not know how to. 


deal with a newborn. It is 
great strain to handle 


newborn. Some mothers do not: 


186 


112: 


65 Blouses 


} “I also am greatly concerned 
4 about drug abuse, particularly 
‘among children. I had a 10'%- 
“year-old boy in here last week 
fwho overdosed on Valium. I 
asked him why he was taking 
valium and he answered, ‘Doc, 
imy nerves are shot. Just shot.’ 
{At 10%. I just don’t understand. 
2 “last week we had nine kids 
7 in here overdosed on drugs, and 
many did not even know what 
| they had taken. All were under 
215 and most were under 13. 
/ “I guess it is a result of our 
j pill-oriented society. TV is 
awful. You can’t watch 
television without someone 
telling you to take a pill for 
something. 
“Someone needs to get on 
television and say that it is 
- OK to be frightened 
sometimes without taking a 
pill. It is OK to be upset, or, in 
given circumstances, 
depressed without taking a 
pill. 


“We all get depressed 


INFANTS 
THRU 14 


GIRLS 
T-Shirts 
Sweaters 


139 Dresses 
67 Coats & Jackets 


(Press-Record Photo) 


sometimes. It is a mood, just 
like laughter is a mood and it 
is OK to deal with it by 
yourself. You do not have to 
take a pill. 

“If I leave just one message 
behind, that is the message I 
want it to be," he stated. 

He pledged he will continue to 
be active in this area whenever 
possible. He has offered to work 
with local schools in presenting 
programs on drug abuse to 
students. He also may resume 
some limited practice in this 
area, if future plans are 
achieved. His activities in the 
county for the Heart Fund will 
continue. 

He also may make his 
presence known as a board 
member of the American Board 
of Emergency Medicine, which 
is preparing “board exams,” or 
qualifying examinations for 
emergency room doctors. 

“T think it is a fallacy to think 
that any physician can handle 
an emergency room. There is 
such a wide variety of things 
you see. 

“Medicine is a constant 
challenge. Whenever you think 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


you know it all, something will 
come along which will com- 
pletely baffle you, and you are 
more likely to see it in an 
emergency room than 
anywhere-else in medicine,” he 
concluded. 

The St. Elizabeth Hospital 
emergency room will continue 
to provide the best possible 
emergency service after Dr. 
Mike leaves, but patients who 
have come to know and-like him 
will miss him. 

Little children who have 
learned to expect him to treat 
them with words such as, 
“Hello, sugar. Now don’t you 


1 G08 Be 
oes 
Ot eat ort Ole 


cv so em tte ie 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978  Page® 
worry. Dr. Mike is going to take 
care of you and I promise I 
won't hurt you,” are going to 
miss him, 

Nurses who have become 
used to being greeted every day 
with, “Good morning,-sugars,”’ 
and who take no offense at,’ 
“Honey,” ‘and ‘Sugar,’ with 
most orders, will miss him, 

In one short year, Dr. Levine 
has made a great impact on 
health care in the Quad-City 
area and many of the things he 
achieved in that time will stay 
here after he is gone, benefit- 
ting Quad-City area residents 
for many yéars to come. 


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“GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Power 


Illinois Power Company ‘on 
Tuesday filed proposed rule 
changes with the Illinois 
Commerce Commission to 
establish curtailment of elec- 
trical service procedures should 
they be necessary in times of 
emergency, such as the current 
strike of coal miners. 


Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978 Page 10 


cutback plan 


The company asked that the 
rules be made effective by the 
Commerce Commission by 
March 24 

At present, the company has 
about 60 days supply of coal for 
its generation stations, a-letter 
accompanying the petition said. 

Four steps are provided in the 


Electric and gas 
records set in ‘77 


Illinois Power Company 
completed the year 1977 with a 
new record in electric peak 
demand, a new record of a 24- 
hour total of kilowatt hours 
delivered, a new peak in a 24- 
hour sendout of natural gas, and 
historic highs in electric and 
gas revenues. 

The company’s annual report, 
being distributed to 
shareholders this week, shows 
that earnings per share of 
common stock increased 11.2 
percent from 1976 to 1977. This 
enabled the board of directors 
to increase the quarterly 
commond stock dividend from 
55 to $7 cents in December 1977. 
The increase of 3.6 percent was 
the first since 1970. 

While the earnings per share 
of common stock of $2.68 for 
1977 are good compared to those 
of recent years, they are still 
substantially below the $2.89 
recorded for the year 1970, a 
spokesman said. 

In summary, the 1977 report 
shows electric revenues were 
up 26.6 percent, from 
$363,066,000 in 1976 to 
$383,567,000 in 1977. 

Gas revenues increased 15.9 
percent from $158,595,000 in 1976 
to $183,820,000 in 1977. 

The’ new electric peak 
demand was 2,846,000 kilowatts 
in 1977 to compare with 2,570,000 
in 1976 — a 10.7 percent increase 
which came within one percent 
of the company’s forecast 

The new kilowatt hour one- 
day record total was 56,977,300 
Kwh, up 14.3 percent from the 


49,838,033 _Kwh record in 1976. 

Wendell J. Kelley, chairman 
and president of the utility, 
which provides gas and electric 
service in 15,000 square miles of 
Illinois, termed 1977 ‘a good 
year for Illinois Power Com- 
pany” in his letter of tran- 
smittal to the stockholders of 
the company. 

The results and developments 
shown in the year support “our 
confidence in the ability and 
resilience of Illinois Power to 
cope relatively well with the 
multiplicity of problems that lie 
ahead,” Kelley said 

He listed as specific 
problems: “Changing and more 
stringent air and water stan- 
dards and in nuclear waste 
disposal; continuing escalation 
of power plant costs and the 
difficulty of getting the finan- 
cing required to meet them; 
and delays caused by in- 
tervention — often irresponsible 
— in just about every kind of 
proceeding.” 

He continued: ‘‘We believe 
that the best — and ultimately 
the only — solution to these 
uncertainties and problems in 
greater public awareness of the 
facts of the energy situation. 

“The public determines the 
demand side of the energy 
equation by its standards of 
living 

“We believe that informed 
citizens will see to it that 
government at all levels make it 
possible for us to carry out our 
responsibilities to help meet the 
supply side of the quation.”” 


curtailment plan. 

They commence with a 
request for voluntary reduction 
of electric consumption; 
proceed through the discon- 
tinuance of providing new 
service; continue with man- 
datory partial curtailment of 
electric loads generally served 
from circuits operating at 
voltages of 34,500 volts or 
higher; and conclude with 
systematic short-period in- 
terruption of those circuits 
operating at less than that 
voltage. 

The curtailment 
requested are these: 

First step: 

All customers will be asked 
voluntarily to reduce electric 
consumption, including the 
reduction of exterior and in- 
terior lighting and moderation 
of building temperatures. The 
utility will make a public plea 
for conservation of electricity, 
with regular public an- 
nouncements. 

Second step: 

The utility will continue to 
accept applications for new 
electric service but will not 
provide new service during 
periods of emergency. 


steps 


filed 


Third step 

Mandatory curtailment of © 
electric loads served from = 
circuits operating at voltages 
34.5 Kv or higher and certain 
commercial and industrial 
loads will be accomplished by 
providing individual notice to 
curtail electric usage by a 
uniform percentage specified 
by the utility. 

Fourth step: 

The utility will implement a 
systematic rotation of in- 
terruptions to circuits operating 
at voltages less than 34.5 Kv. 


Curtailments planned for each / 


circuit will approximate one 
and a half hours in duration. 
The percentage reductions for 
individual customers curtailed 
in this step will be ap- 
proximately equal to the 
reductions in the third step, it 
was estimated. 

Exempt from the third and 
fourth steps are electric loads 


that are known to the utility to # 


provide a function necessary for 
public health, such as hospitals; 


for national or state security; > 


for essential public services, 
such as police and fire statior 
and for alleviating  cir- 
cumstances contributing to the }: 
emergency. 


‘Statewide tornado 
drill on March 8 


5 The National Weather Service 
Office in cooperation with the 
:IMinois Emergency Services 
and Disaster Agency will 
cenduct a tornado drill Wed- 
nesday, March 8, at 10:15 a.m. 

& The exercise is being con- 
ducted to test the com- 

jmunication, warning and 
lrecovery capabilities in all 
areas of the state in preparation 
for the 1978 tornado season. 

In Illinois, the announcement 

+ of the tornado drill will be made 
1 on the State Police frequency of 

§ 42.5MHz and will be received on 

‘the emergency warning- 

| alerting radio receivers in place 

vin thousands of schools, in- 

{ stitutions, hospitals and’ fac- 

+ tories of the state. 

{The tornado drill exercise will 

commence with the National 

i: Weather Service making the 
announcement. In response, 

each community of the state 


Traffic controls 


An ordinance approved by the 
City Council Tuesday night 
prohibits the parking of vehicles 
18 feet or more in length on the 
west side of the 2400 block of 
4 Sheridan Avenue. 

Alderman Sam Whitmer told 


Change thermostats, turn 
out lights, governor asks 


Governor James R_ Thomp- 
son called this week for Illinois 
citizens and businesses to 
implement three electricity- 
saving measures voluntarily 
during the next two weeks 

Thompson said the actions 
are -necessary because of a 
growing nationwide coal 
shortage brought on by the 
miners’ strike. 

If followed, he said, the three 
measures can result in an 
estimated 10 to 13 percent 
saving in total electric con- 
sumption. 


The governor asked that 
individuals and ‘corporations: 

1, Set all electric heating: 
thermostats at 68 degrees: 
during the day and at 60 degrees: 
between 10 p.m. and 6 am. | 
2. Set all electric water 
heaters at 120 degrees or, 
“medium.” : 
3. Eliminate all non-essential! 
lighting, particularly night! 
display windows and outdoor? 
advertising. 

In addition, the governor 
urged all Illinoisans to avoid 
wasting electricity—by turning’ 





Ch 


FREE SUPER SHEF® 


When you purchase one at the regular 


price with 


this coupon 


urger 


ef 


off appliances, such as 
televisions, radios, hair dryers 
and space heaters, when not in 
use. 

He also recommended more 
prudent use of electric ovens 
and clothes dryers. 

And he urged 
electricity users 
conservation 
wherever possible. 

“These are modest, tem- 
porary measures, but vitally 
important to us all,’’ Thompson 
said. 

“Full involvement by the 
people of Lllinois will assure 
fairness, help protect our jobs 
and economy and help avert the 
need for more serious 
measures.” 

Underscoring the problem, 

» the governor said, are two 
Illinois utilities which have 
already requested voluntary 
conservation efforts by 
customers to help preserve 
their slowly diminishing coal 
stockpiles. Central Illinois 
Public Service, with 295,000 
customers, has a 27-day supply. 
City Water, Light and Power, 
Springfield, with 150,000 
customers, has a 30-day supply. 

In the Springfield situation, 
Thompson said, the state itself 
is a large customer. ‘‘We 
initiated an emergency 
program to reduce our con- 
sumption in state buildings and 
have achieved a 25 percent 
energy saving equivalent to a 
weekly cost reduction of more 
than $30,000." 

Overall, Illinois’ electric 
utility sector is in relatively 
good shape, with.a 40- to 55-day 
coal supply, he said. However, 
250 public schools and 36;000 
single-family dwellings depend 
on coal for heat—and sources 
for all are rapidly diminishing. 

It will be about 30 days after 
the miners’ strike ends before 
added coal will be received in 
any significant amount, the 
governor said. 

Thompson noted that since 
Jan. 1, about 1,000 émergency 
calls have been received on the 
fuel energy hotline at the 
Illinois Division ‘of Energy. 
Most of them were from 
homeowners in need of coal, he 
said; all were directed to 
remaining supplies. 

The governor said he has 
made several public service 
announcements which are being 
distributed, urging citizens to 
conserve electrical energy. 

“Tf you don’t need that light, 
turn it off,” he urges. 


industrial 
to institute 
measures 


‘Cassin heads 
‘Ul. Terminal 


The Tlinois Terminal 


will follow established 
procedures as though a tornado 
were approaching. 

All schools will be notified of 
the tornado drill through the 
superintendent, Office of 
Education. 

The Illinois Emergency 
Services and Disaster Agency 
expects thatall local and county 
emergency and disaster 
organizations will participate. 

“The drill will provide’ an 
opportunity for each com- 
munity to test its emergency 
preparedness plan for com- 
munication, warning and 
response to a potential tornado 
disaster,” a spokesman said in 
emphasizing its importance. 

In a further effort to assure 
coordinated response training, 
the states of Missouri 
Kansas will conduct a tornado 
drill at.the same time. 


approved 


the aldermen that he believes a 
blanket ordinance for all parts 
of the city to control the parking 
of tractor-trailer units should be 
adopted rather than “piece- 
meal’’ ordinances affecting 
various parts of the city. 

Council members also ap- 
proved an ordinance providing 
a four-way traffic stop at 
Bremen and Prairie avenues. 

The city’s vehicle license law 
also was amended by an or- 
dinance to include a reduced 
cost of $1 for wheel tax tags 
purchased by elderly persons on 
social security disability 

The $1 tax fee is included in 
the original ordinance setting 
wheel tax costs, but the original 
bill failed to provide the lower 
fee for disabled persons. 

A resolution annexing a 28- 
acre tract of land on Old Alton 
Road behind Johnson School 
also was approved. The an. 
nexation petition was approved 
by the City Plan Commission 
several months ago. 


,To ask warrant 
in forgery case 


Granite City police detectives 
planned to seek a felony 
warrant today against a 22- 
year-old Florissant, Mo., 
woman who allegedly at- 
tempted to cash a forged $235 
check at 10:05 a.m. Wednesday 
at Schnuck's Supermarket in 
Crossroads Plaza Shopping 
Center. 

A Schnuck's _ employee 
discovered the check was stolen 
and store officials held the 
woman until police arrived. The 
store officials gave officers a 
check from ABC Window 
Cleaning Co., Hazelwood, Mo., 
made out to a man and said the 
woman presented the check, 
saying she was the man’s wife. 

Since 16 other stolen checks 
from ABC Window Cleaning 
have been cashed at other 
Schnuck’s stores, the ,em- 
ployees had been told to watch 
for additional checks from that 
firm, 


3 THE KEY 


3 THE KEY 3: 3 THE KEY 


3 THE KEY 


aZm—am0s0n 


and. 


THE KEY 


nace FN EET 


MR. AND MRS. RICKIE E,. VOSS who were 
married on Jan. 27 in a civil ceremony in Clayton, Mo., 
by Judge Robert S. Cohen. Formerly Tanya F. Davidson, 


the bride is a daughter of Mr. 


and Mrs. Walter T. 


Davidson, 2931 Myrtle Ave. The groom is a son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Earl C. Voss, 2916 Saratoga Ave. Attending the 


couple were Paul and Judy Slone. 


residing in Granite City. 


Progressive Class 
meeting at church 


Devotions taken from Luke 
15:20 provided the program at 
the Progressive Class meeting 
held at Second Baptist Church 
last week. 

Mrs. Dorothy Barnes 
presented the lesson and Mrs. 
Naomi Burnett presided over 
the meeting. Prayers were 
offered by Mrs. Minnie Cavins, 
Mrs. Naomi Rongey, and Mrs. 
Lena Bonnivar. 

Members agreed to send fruit 
baskets to two members who 
are ill, 

Also attending were Virginia 
‘Taylor, Rachel Westphal, Telia 
Naylor, Iva Biggs, Lena 
Stephens, Mamie Stroud and 
Virginia Ficker. 


Women's caucus 
endorses three 


The Women's political Caucus. 
in this area has endorsed State 
Representatives Joe Lucco and 
Jim McPike for re-election in 
the 56th Legislative District and 
has backed Dan O'Neill for 
state senator. All are 
Democrats. 

Mary Schultz said today, 
“These candidates support 
most or all of the goals of the 
National and Illinois Women's 
Political Caucus on women's 
issues and women’s rights in 
legislation. All favor 
ratification of the Equal Rights 
Amendment.”’ 


STATE REPRESENTATIVE . 


3 THE KEY x 


yr ELECT x 
SAM WOLF 


The newlyweds are 


(Hollywood-Andrews Studio) 


Social meeting 
of Eta Chapter 


Eta Chapter, Phi Tau Omega 
Sorority held its regular social 
meeting Tuesday evening at the 
Barrel Restaurant hosted by the 
club officers, Mrs. Jo Ervay, 
Miss Betty Krug, Mrs. Alma 
Paschedag and Mrs, Mary Lou 
Richeson. 

Appointments wer in 
keeping with the George 
Washington birthday theme. 
Following a family style dinner, 
card games were played and 
prizes awarded. 

Those holding high scores 
were Miss Kathryn Weddell, 
Miss Dolores Sheridan, Mrs. 
Georgiana Van Buskirk, Mrs. 
Gladys Waggoner and’ Mrs. 
Mary Evalyne Yencho. 

Others present _ were 
Mesdames Dorothy Brewster, 
Lorraine Butler, Lois Hodge, 
Shirley Morgan, Ann ‘Tatum, 
Evelyn Todd and Misses Eunice ~ 
Hatscher and | Miss Hilda 
Schroeder. 

The monthly _ business 
meeting is set for March 1. 


TRY A PRESS-RECORD’ 
CLASSIFIED AD 


LICENSE PLATES 
and TITLES 
Fast Service... Call 
Helen E. Toundas 
797-0100 


1801 Pontoon Road 


3 THE KEY 


ame De LP a Se 


Le > Lae 


m.e > Ie i 


56th DISTRICT 
“Your Local Quad-City Candidate" 


The Quad-City area being one of the most industri: ind populous communities in 
the 56th District certainly deserves to have at least ONE of the three-legisigtors 
from this crea. WE HAVE NONE AT PRESENT! Only by FULLY supporting a local 
candidate can we expect to compete with other areas that always seem to stand 
by their own. , 


¥ ELECT SAM WOLF MARCH 21st xx 


Super Shef is our quarter pound 
100% all beef patty served ona 
sesame seed bun with pickles, 
lettuce, tomatoes, catsup, salad 
dressing, onions and cheese. 


Offer good only at participating Burger 
Chet Family Restaurants in the St. Louis 
and Metro East area. Void where 
prohibited, taxed or restricted by law. 
One coupon per customer per visit. 


Offer expires March 25, 1978 


eb elt 


Railroad Co. board bf directors 
has elected Walter J. Cassin as 
president and a director, ef- 
fective yesterday. 3 

Cassin, 55, began his railroad 
career in 1946. Prior to his 
election, he was assistant vice 
president-marketing of the 
Illinois Central Gulf Railroad at 
Chicago. 

He Mand his wife have four 
children and reside in 


3 THE KEY 


iis ade 
i pea 


I 


THE QUAD-CITIES DESERVE 
VOTE FOR STEVE MARAGIDES — MAR 





GRANITE CITY. PRESS-RECORD Thurs., Feb. 23, 1978 


_ Wider participation in blood program here March 7 being urged 


i 


Page 11 3 


The Tri-City Shrine Club and 
the Granite City Area PTA 
Council are co-sponsoring a 
community blood donor 
Program. The two Masonic 
Lodges of Granite City, 835 and 
877, are also cooperating in this 
project. 

‘The blood donor program will 
be held in cooperation with the 
Tri-City Chapter of the 
American Red Cgoss. 

The blood donor program will 
be held at the Nameoki 
Recreation Center, Pontoon 
Road and Franklin Avenue, on 
Tuesday, March 7. It will run 
from 12:30 until 6:30 p.m. 

Transportation will be 
provided for those desiring it,-to 
and from the donor program. 
Babysitting services will be 
provided at the recreation 
center. 

In Illinois, persons between 
the ages of 17 and 65 may donate 
blood. A donor must weigh at 
least 110 pounds, 

“If any person has a question 
he may contact the 
American Red Cross in Granite 
City, 452-7184," Don Kopp, 
chairman of the blood project, 
said. 

“The plans are to have three 
mobile units which total 18 beds. 
The schedule allows 18 donors 
every 20 minutes. Volunteers 
are being provided by the 
organizations involved. 

“In order to make the 
program work more smoothly, 
appointments may be made. A 
donor may pick the most con- 
venient time, cutting-down on 
any unnecessary wait before 
donating. 

“A master appointment sheet 
is being kept,” Kopp added. 

Those wishing to donate blood 
for local community needs may 
contact any of the following 
people: 4 

Barbara Haddock - Area PTA 
Council president — 931-4063. 

Bill Lancaster - Lodge 835 — 
876-1199. 

Robert Prichard - Lodge 877 
— 451-2614. 

Dan Churovich - Tri-City 


* Shrine — 876-0308. 


Mildred Meehan - Tri-City 
Red Cross — 452-7134. 

Don Kopp - general chairman 
— 931-6273. 

“Granite City is included in 


Like a good 
beLoa ted oloroy 
State Farm 


is there. 


with help for your 
COC Tem COUT eae Lie 
WCU 


ED 
NICHOLS 


3014 Madison 
876-8728 


‘a 


i RAY 
; MORGAN 


1506 Johnson Rd 
876-7373 


TOM 
THEBEAU 


2534 Madison 
877-5504 


JOE 
HASSLER 


3727 Nameoki 
877-4918 


BILL 
FRAZIER 


crcusclu 
2126 Pontoon Rd. 
451-7507 


MIKE 
TOUNDAS 


1801 Pontoon 
797-0100 
797-0101 


‘STATE FARM | 


insurance Companie: 


Homa Offices: Bloomington, Ili: | 


the St. Louis area Red Cross 
blood program coverage,” 
Kopp said. 

“This area is approximately a 
250-miles radius, using St. Louis 
as the center. 


“Included are 170 hospitals in 
Missouri and Illinois that 
receive their total supply of 
blood from the Red Cross. This 
includes the St. Louis Shrine 
Hospital for Crippled Children. 


“Every day, Red Crops 
mobile units leave the center'to 
collect blood at various places 
— blood that often makes the 
difference between life aid 
death; 800 units of blood must 


be drawn each day to take care 
of the normal needs of the 
rhetropolitan area. 
“This means approximately 
190,000 units of blood each year. 
“In Granite City, St. 


Elizabeth Hospital receives and 
uses approximately 2,400 units 
of blood, entirely obtained 
through the Red Cross. 

“It is estimated that an ad- 
ditional 600 patients receive/ 


blood in St. Louis hospitals. 
Blood used in still other 
hospitals and in other areas 
cannot be estimated. 

“Granite City donors give less 
than 2,400 units at our blood 


drives. THis is 600 more units of 


«blood used by our community,” 


Kopp concluded in urging that 
all ‘who. are physi¢ally able 
consider contributing blood on 
March 7. 


EASY SHOPPING... AT VERY EASY PRICES 
DOUBLE EASY SAVINGS! ‘ 


Visine 
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Gets the Red Out 


wa 2/19? 


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Regular $1.39 
Formula 20 
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Dandruff treatment by 
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Feb. 23-26/78. Limit 1 


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FOR A COLD 
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savings on comforting aids and prescriptions. 


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Clothing center is aiding hundreds of local youngsters 


By VALERIE EVENDEN 

Press-Record Staff Writer 
A mother with six schoolage 

children is looking for good, 
used coats for several of her 
youngsters, 

A high school youth, about 15, 
hates to go to school in his too 
short coat and above ankle 
pants and needs something 
decent to wear. 

Both the mother and student 
make for the.only place in the 
Quad-City area catering to the 
schoolage child in need of school 
clothes—Coordinated Youth 
Services (YCS), located on the 
corner of Delmar and 
Niedringhaus avenues. 

Most of those seeking clothes 
at CYS are not aware a clothing 
center exists there. 

They know the youth agency 
has helped with other problems 
and hope they can again get the 
assistance each needs. 

“In this town when you 
don’t know where to go, the 
first thing you think about is 
to call the CYS office,” the 
mother told the Press-Record 
reporter. 

Mrs. Gladys Bass of ‘the CYS 
staff said the youth and the 
mother of six are typical of the 
people seeking help who come 
to the CYS Clothing Center, 
where emphasis is placed on 
offering the type of clothing 
“people want to 
share..,..good, quality 
clothes.” 

Since the center reopened for 
students’ in September, more 
than 520 clothing orders have 
been filled. Nearly all are for 
more than one garment. 

In addition, through the 
agency, 110 layettes consisting 
of brand new infantwear have 
been received by young 
mothers, most of whom do not 
qualify for Public Aid 
assistance prior to the baby’s 
birth and receive no supportive 
funds until a few weeks after the 
infant arrives. 

It was decided to revive the 
CYS Clothing Center when 
Church Women United (CWU) 
in the Quad-Cities closed its 
student clothing program last 
year 

No funds had been budgeted 
for a clothing center, so its 
development was gradual, Mrs. 
Bass explained. 

The center originally was 
operated by CWU as an at- 
tractive botique-style store in 
the basement of the former 
CYS building, —_across 
Niedringhaus Avenue from its 
present location. 

‘The facility was moved when 
the quarters became too 
cramped for the number of 
clients and the quantity of 
clothing to be displayed, sized 
and stored. 


The Church Women's group 
continued to sponsor the 
clothing outlet for several 
years, at different locations, 
until reluctantly relinquishing 
the project in 1977. 


Several volunteers from the 
Church Women’s organization 
still continue to work at the CYS 
center, it was learned. 


“Right'now, we are in urgent 
need of area residents willing to 
donate good clothing to -help 
these children stay in school,” 
Mrs. Bass said. 


“It isn’t difficult to imagine 
how hard it is for a boy or girl to 
go to school willingly, when the 
only clothes they have to wear 
are either too small, too large or 


FIRST 
BAPTIST CHURCH 


21st St. at Delmar 
Sunday School 9:30 
Morning Worship 10:40 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


otherwise unsuitable for today’s 
young people,” the CYS 
supervisor said. 

She stressed there is a 
definite need for specific 
clothing items and in precise 
sizes for both boys and girls, 

The list of needed items in- 
cludes: 

Boys’ jeans and shirts in sizes 
4 to 12, and boys’ coats and 
jackets in sizes 6, 8 and 10. 

Girls need jeans, tops and 
blouses in sizes-4 to 12 and coats 
in sizes’ 6, 8, 10 and 12. 

C. A. “Bud” McMillan, CYS 
executive director, said the 
clothing center is not duplicated 
elsewhere in the community, 
and the program is decidedly 
“geared to school attendance. 

“We have found this is one 
way to help the kids be in school 
everyday,” he stated. 

Commenting about some of 
the clothing donated to the 
center, McMillan said, “We 
do get some junk items and we 
prefer fo receive the type of 
clothing a young person is 
proud to wear. 

“But, if we can’t use it we 
turn the clothing over to 
Goodwill Industries for 
processing.” 

Garments more suitable for 
older men are passed along to a 
program sponsored by ARCH 
(Alcoholic Rehabilitation 
Community House). 

Some shoes are received 
through donations, but most are 
purchased by the agency. 

Funds allocated to Coor- 
dinated Youth from Old 
Newsboys Day collections are 
designated for the purchase of 
new undergarments for the 
children, 

“This is not a charity 
operation. Its purpose is much 
more meaningful,’ McMillan 
said. 

“Most families are yery 
grateful to receive this help and 
when the children grow out of 
the clothes some bring them 
back to exchange for larger 
sizes. Others just return the 
garments for some other child 
to use,” he explained 

The agency does not expect 
the clothing to be returned, 
knowing full well that growing 
children are rough on clothes, 
but this happen’ more often 
than would be anticipated, it 
was learned. 

Good clothing for 
preschoolers through 12 also 
appears to be among the har- 
dest items to get through 
donations, the CYS staffers 
said. 

Applications for the 
clothing, which details in- 
formation on the ages of the 
children and their sizes, are 
picked up and returned to the 
main CYS office on 
Niedringhaus Avenue, or its 
satellite offices in Pontoon 
Beach and in the Madison- 
Venice area. 

The applications are then 
evaluated and checked against 
the clothing inventory at the 
center. 

Mrs. Bass said if requested 
items are not in stock at. the 
time an application is received, 
the person is notified as soon as 
a suitable garment is found 

At the present time, the 
clothing inventory at the CYS 
center is very, low. 

‘The Agency has been helping 
youngsters whose homes were 
destroyed in recent fires, 

This kind of ‘‘mass’”’ 
assistance always seems to hit 
at once and really depletes the 
stock, it was noted by the center 
staff. 

Apart from applications 
taken at the CYS offices, 
referrals for clothing are 
received from many agencies, 
such as the Red Cross, and from 
schools, among other sources. 

St. Elizabeth Hospital “has 


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BAKE SHOP 

yer Fifty Years In The Baking Industry 
ra eet 

fe TAM to 9 P.M. 


Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978 Page 12 


(called for a layette when a 
young mother had nothing but a 
receiving blanket in which to 
take home her infant, Mrs. Bass 
said. 

But the main thrust of the 
program is geared to.the school 
child - to help keep the boy or 
girl in school and reasonably 
well clothed. , 


a 





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Many individuals walk inté 
the CYS office without an 
appointment, such as thé 
teenage boy mentioned earlier; 

The mother of six filled in ay 
application and an appointment 
was made for her to visit the 
center and fulfill the needs of 
her children 3 

In a brief conversation, the 
mother commented about the 
difficulty in rearing six children 
alone 


Providing suitable clothing 
for school is only one of her 
problems, but it is a major 
concern when she is trying 
hard to keep her teenage 
children in school 


Even with public assistance, 
her financial burden seems 
monumental when clothing six 
youngsters, ranging in age from 
six to 16. 

The cost of purchasing six 


STANT Be 


pairs of tennis shoes for gym 
classes at school is an im- 
possible feat, unless the need 
for the shoes is staggered 
throughout the year. 

“] just can’t afford to buy 
three or four coats at one time. 
It is impossible,” the mother 
said. “Then, there are shoes 
and jeans the kids need.” 

“The coat my son got last 
year is now up to his belt, he has 
grown that much. He is too 


at Central Hardware 


LEATE 


embarrassed to, go to high 
school wearing it.” 

The mother had not known 
about the CYS Clothing Center 

She explained that her 
daughter previously was 
enrolled in a CYS program and 
the other children had received 
passes from the CYS to swim at 
the YMCA during the summer 
months. 

“In this town when you don’t 
know where to go, the first thing 


you think about is to call..the 
CYS office and ask,’’ she’ said. 

“There isn’t anywhere elsé to 
turn..I’m yery happy it (CYS) is 
here,” she added. 

Persons with quality clothing 
they are willing to donate for 
schoolage children or younger, - 
are invited to contract Mrs. 
Bass at 876-2383, or bring. the 
items to any of the CYS offices.- 

The clothing will be put to 
good use. 


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> 49 


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Seek youth in theft attempt 


A thin boy in his ‘late teens 
attempted to steal the purse of 
Helen “Frazier of Lincoln 
Avenue, in front of Joyce and 
Micsere Tavern, 18th Street 

mar Avenue, at 3 p.m. 
plea ue, at 3 p.m. 
pee ey webbed for the 

A accidentally grabbed 
a-book bag she was carrying. 
Her arm became entangled in 
the book'bag strap and she was 
dragged as the boy attempted to 
pull the bag from her. 

A man who saw the attempt 


came to help the victim and the 
would-be robber ran to a small 
yellow car parked near 18th 
Street and Edison Avenue. The 
youth drove in a reckless 
manner east on i8th Street, 
nearly striking a parked 
vehicle. 

The auto may have been a 
1971 or 1972 Capri. 


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One-day closing of 
hospital entrance 
The entrance to the Doctor’s 
Wing of St. Elizabeth Hospital, 
at the rear of the building near 
the main parking lot, will be 
closed Tuesday, Feb. 28, from 8 
p.m., it was an- 


to facilitate a phase of con- 
struction for the hospital. ex- 
pansion. The closing will be for 
‘only the one day. Those usually 
using that entrance may use the 
former emergency room en- 
trance facing 2ist Street, it was 
announced. 


| 


Mrs. Julia Dixon succumbs 


Mrs. Julia Mae (Simmons) 
Dixon, 72, of Bourbonnais, Il;, 
formerly of the Quad-Cities, 
died at 7 p.m. Monday at the 
Bourbonnais Nursing Home. 
Born in Bardsville, Ky., she 
resided in this area 21 years. 
Mrs. Dixon was a resident of the 
nursing-home two and one half 


years. 

Mrs. Dixon was employed as 
an executive housekeeper fir 
Missouri Baptist Hospital, St. 
Louis, for many years prior |.0 
her retirement seven years agp. 


at Central Hardware 


UMFINISHED 


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ACCORDING TO YOUR OWN 


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She was of the Methodist 
faith. : 

Her husband, Alfred Dixon, 
died in 1936. « 
+ Survivors include -one son, 
Horace of Bradley, Ill; five 
brothers, Thelwood and Owen 
Simmons, both of Granite City, 
Artel and William Simmons, 
both of Madison, and. Cecil 
Simmons of Helena, Ark.; five 
grandchildren and’ six great- 
grandchildren. 
| Funeral arrangements are 
given in the obituary column. 


’ 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs. Feb. 23,1978 Page 13 


Immunization rate high 
in GC school district 


A higher percentage of. 
Granite City school district 
pupils have received proper 
immi@nizations agains 
childhood. diséases than any 
other district in Madison 
County, the Granite City Board 


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of Education was told Tuesda: 
‘night. 

Vasil Eftimoff, ad- 
ministrative assistant for pupil- 
personnel “services” of the 
district, told the board that 
while the percentage of students 
who can show they were im- 
munizede is higher than the 
state-wide average, it still does 
not reflect 100 percent ‘com- 
pliance with the Illinois 
Department of Public Health 
regulations. 

All students in pubiic school 
must be immunized against 
polio, diphtheria, pertussis, 
tetanus, measles, Rubella 
(German measles) and mumps. 

Some reasons for less than 100 
percent immunization are in- 
complete records for some 
students, transients and records 
due from other districts, and 
children who have had recent 
doses for some diseases, but 
have not yet had the required 
number of doses. 

The percentages of students 
receiving physical 
examinations in the three grade 
levels surveyed were well above 
the state averages, he reported. 
In kindergarten, 98.23 percent 
of Granite City students show 
examinations in their files 
compared to 79 percent state- 
wide. 

Fifth graders’ records show 
97.29 percent have been given 
physicals, compared to 73 
percent throughout the state, 
and at the ninth grade level, 
96.49 percent of Granite City 
students have been examined 
while the state-wide percentage 
is 87 percent. 

The percentages of stydents 
having proper immunizations 
against childhood diseases in 
the Granite City district also is 
well above the state averages, 


Gerald Bushue, principal of 
Niedringhaus School, told the 
Granite City Board of 
Education Tuesday night that 
fie plans to retire from! the 
school district June 7. 

In his retirement letter to the 
board, Bushye said: 

“It is with some trepidation 
but more of joyful anticipation 
that I. am announcing my 
retirement at the end of the 
current school year. 


Arrest woman 


on warrant 


Carol A. Krug, 34, East St. 
Louis, was arrested at ] p.m. 
Tuesday and was charged with 
reckless condyct on 4 warrant 
issued by Associate Judge 
Thomas Gibbons. 

Police, aware there was a 
warrant on file for her arrest, 
said they saw her walking 
behind the police ‘station and 
arrested her., 

The warrant charges that on 
Deé. 30, 1977, she poured lantern 
fuel on the floor and carpeting 
of the mobile home of her 
husband, William Krug, 3052 
Nameoki Drive, and set it on 
fire. 

The fire was. quickly ex- 
tinguished by a neighbor and 
caused only about $250 damage, 
according to official reports. 

She pleaded innocent to the 
charge at 2:05 p.m. Tuesday 
and was released on $152 bond. 


Services for 
former resident 


Funeral services were con- 
ducted at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at 
Westminster Memorial Mor- 
tuary, Westminster, Calif., for 
Mrs. Pearl Mae Hood, 84, of 
11871 Bailey, Garden Grove, 
Calif., formerly of Granite City. 

She died at 4 a.m. Saturday, 
Feb.. 18, at UCLA Medical 
Center. Mrs. Hood had been ill 
for two years ang was 
hospitalized for seven months. 
ae Hood resided in Granite 

ity for 50 years prior to moving 
to California 12 years ago. 

Survivors include a daughter, 
Mrs. Sharon Marcum of Garden 
Grove; one son Jack E. Hood of 


is below the 9 percent mark 
categories. * 
Hinois ‘Department of 
Pul Health warns that 90 
percent of the children in the 
state- need to be adequately 
immunized te — prevent 
epidemics. 

Children either vaccinated 
against measles or having had 
the disease total $3.28 percent in 
the Granite City district, while 
the state-wide average is only 72 
percent. Also, 91.99 percent of 
our childr: surveyed have 
taken the Rubella vaccine while 
only 68 percent of those in the 
state are immynized. , 

Problem areas inclyde 
students not having had four or 
more-doses of polio vaccine 
where 75.5 percent here have 
been immunized (53. pereent 
state-wide), students not having 
had mumps or the vaeceine, 
where 78.91 pereent of local 
students are protected (59 
percent state-wide), and the 
DPT vaccine, requiring five or 
more: doses, 

Only 57.83 percent of Granite 
City ‘students surveyed have 
had the required number of 
doses of DPT (diphtheria, 
pertussis, tetanus) ‘vaccine 
(compared to only 34 percent 
state-wide), but many local 
physicians feel four doses 
provide adequate protection 
and 96.8 percent of Granite City 
kindergarten children were 
found to have taken four doses. 

“The policy of our Board of 
Education, tenacious efforts of 
the principals and nurses and 
cooperation of parents and local 
doctors are to be commended 
for the efforts to protect the 
children in Granite City against 
preventable diseases,'’ 
Eftimoff said in the report. 


Principal to retire . 


“I have thoroughly enjoyed 
working, in the Granite City 
sehool system, The cooperation 
of the teachers, my fellow 
principals and administrators 
have made my 21 years in the 
Granite City school system very 
rewarding. 

“I would also like to express 
my appreciation to the Board of 
Education for its many con- 
siderations and support I have 
received. It means g lot to have _ 
a dedicated Board of 
Education,’’ the letter con- 
cluded. 

Bushue has been = an 
elementary school educator ahd 
principal for 82 years and 
{aught outside of this distriet for 
12% years, including eight 
years at Flora, 1. , 

He was hired in September 
1957 as a sixth grade teacher at 
Niedringhaus Sehool and was 
appointed acting principal April 
15, 1959. During the Dollowi 
school year, he. was nam 
principal and served in that 
position to the present time. 

The board agreed to accept 
the retirement with regrets. 

In other action the board 
hired Robert Adams as a 
custodian and granted an ex- 
tension of leave of absence until 
March 17 to Jane Franko, 9 
Johnson School teacher. 

They also voted to increase 
the pay of custodians, election 
days from $15 to $20 to meet the 
pay now given election judges. 


CAROLYN ROWDEN ON 
DEAN'S LIST AT PARKS 
Miss Carolyn B. Rowden, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert) 
W. Rowden, Granite: City, has’ 
been named to the dean's list at’ 
Parks College of Saint Louis. 
University. She was selected for: 
the honor by réason of ‘out-' 
standing scholastic attainment.; 
Miss Rowden, a graduate of 
Granite City High School North, 
is in the Transportation, Travel 
and Tourism program gt Parks °. 
© College, Cahokia. * 


Send Campaign Donations 
DON VAUGHN tor 





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SHERIFF 
ANY ROOM. SAVE $S THIS WEEKI' ¢. 


Granite City; grandehildren 6. 

and great-grandchildren. e a 
Burial was in Westminster 

Cemetery, Calif. 


1488 


JUDGE WM. E. “BILL” 


JOHNSO?D 
» Democrat for Circuit Judge 


Practice in, Granite City. Judge for’ 3 years in. 
Granite City. Former member of the coal miners, 
gloss bottle blowers, and sheet metal workers | 
unions. Instructor of siness law. at $.1.U.E. Member 
of Co-ordinated Youth Boord and past board member 
of the Madison County Mental Health Association in. 
Gronite City, be 

| NO-NONSENSE LAW AND ORDER JUDGE | 
Bill Johnson is fair, courageous and understanding | 

+ @ fan who does not cater to special interests 


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GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 14 


MOCK. CONVENTION. Boy Scouts nearly 200 
strong gather in the Granite City Township Building to 
hold .a mock presidential convention, complete with 
speeches, campaign promises und lots of signs. At lower 


Sierra Club will testify 
against Union. Electric 


(The Sierra..Club plans t 
testify Against Union Electric's 
west for pollution varienc. 

Ps hearings to be held in S$ 

Louis on March 7 and 8. 

UE has requested the 
variances from the Missouri Air 
Conservation Commission on 
sulfur dioxide emission 
regulations at its Labadie and 
Portage des Sioux coal-fired 
power plants. 

Jim Kirk of East Alton, 
spokesman for the Piasa 
Palisades Group of the Sierra 
Club in Southwestern Illinois, 
said, “The Portage Plant 
surrounded on three sides by 
Illinois and it’s a safe bet that, 

chever way the wind blows, 
IMlinois residents are breathing 
their. emissions. 

“It’s high ‘time they cleaned 
house like the rest of the in- 
dustry has been required to-do,’’ 

Kirk went on to say, “UE has 
known since before 1970 that it 
must do something about its 
sulfur dioxide problem 

“UE “officials have prided 
themselves on the high-stack 
method of disposal, to rid 
themselves of the harmful SO2 
pollutant. As a result, neigh- 
boring Hlinois gets the bad air. 

Portage des Sioux has 600- 
foot-high stacks. 

Illinois, with one of the more 
stringent’ air pollution laws in 
the country, permits industry to 
emit only 1.8 pounds of sulfur 
dioxide per million BTU’s 


generated. Missouri’s 
regulations allow up to 2.3. \ 

Union Electric will not meet 
either of these standards and 
has requested a permanent 
variance from the Missouri Air 
Conservation Commission 
which would allow it to emit up 
to 6.3 pounds per million 
BTU’s—or 34% times the Illinois 
tandard, the Sierra Club 
asserts. 

The Mlinois Environmental] 
Protection Agency previously 
announced opposition to the 
variance, and Illinois Attorney 
Gtneral William J. Scott has 
intervened officially on behalf 
of the residents: of Illinois. 

Kirk, a member of the 
executive committee of the 
Piasa Palisades Group, adds, 

What is particularly ‘distur- 
bing to the Sierra Club is that 
UE's variance. request is an 

there is no 


there are no 
provisions for a compliance 
schedule to clean up t 
emissions. If they were making 
a good-faith effort to correct the 
problem, the Sierra Club could 
accept that. As it is they’re just 
not going to spend any money 
until they're forced to.” 

UE was awarded a rate in- 
crease this month by the Illinois 
Commerce Commission which 
wilh increase UE’s revenue an 
estimated $9 million annually. 

‘The Lung Association tells 


* Resources, 


right corner 


is‘ Mike Yencho, 
convention, and second from right, also with back to ; 


chairman of 


camera, is Ron Christ, secretary to the convention. 


us that sulfur-dioxide ean in- 
crease respiratory disease and 
add to the risk of chronic 
bronchitis. Studies’ 
London and Rotterdam show.a. 
rise in the daily death rate as 
S02 concentrations" increase. 

“Other studies in New York 
City and Chicago showed in- 
creased emergency clinic visits 
when S02 levels rose. Sulfur 
dioxide causes breathlessness, 
throat and eye irritation, 
depression and apathy,” Kirk 
added. 

“Of major importance‘ to 
Illinois’ economic community is 
the fact that deteriorating air 
quality in Illinois caused by 
Missouri industries. may 
preclude further development 
here.” 

Public hearings are to be held 
on March 7 and 8 at the Colony 
Hotel in St. Louis County—from 
11 a.m. to9 p.m. on Tuesday and 
continuing at 8:30 a.m. on 
Wednesday. 

Individuals wishing to make a 
statement at the hearing must 
request permission in writing at 
least seven days in advance. 
Written comments will be ac- 
cepted for a period of seven 
days following the hearing. 

The contact person is Michael: 
T. Marshall, staff director, Air 
Quality ‘Program, Division - of 
Environmental. Quality, 
Department of» ‘Natural 
P.O. Box 1368, 


Jefferson City, Mo. 65161. 


taken in, 


the 


EXPERT APPRAISING 
MORRISS REALTY CO. 


a 12 NOON ‘Tit 


CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT. Boy Scouts of 
the Cahokia Mound Council who were candidates during 
a mock election of “President of the United States” are, 
from left, Bruce De Runtz of Troop 13; Jim Bolin, Troop 


146; Bill Winter, 


Troop 102; Jim Down, Troop 22, the 


successful candidate; Everett Jolly, Troop 23; Bill 


Weekend tryouts for MASH show 


Tryouts for the East Bank 
Players next production, 
“MASH,” will take place at the 
Tri-City Area YMCA from 2 to 4 
p.m. Saturday and from 7:30 to 
9:30 p.m. Sunday, it was an- 
nounced this week by Dan 
McGee, director. 


FRIDAY 12 NOON ‘TIL MI 


The play, a stage version of 
the movie and television series, 
has roles for 15 males and 15 
females. Persons interested in 
taking part also may call 931- 
3010 or 931-2853 for further 
details. 


a 
Kafalas, Troop 5; Lyle Tempel, Troop 15. Scoutmasters 
and leaders standing behind their candidates are Marvin 


Wiedemier, Troop 13; Dale Poiter, 


Troop 146; Fred 


Mercer, Troop 102; Norman Draper, Troop 22; William 
Down Troop 11; Bob Patton, Troop 23; Pat Bush, Troop 
5,and Bob Williams, Troop 15. * 


GC man helps clear snow-covered areas 


Private First Class Randall 

Joseph, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Joel Joseph,.2925 Iowa St., was 
among military men who 
helped clear snow drifts and 
open traffic in parts of Ohio and 
in Boston after heavy snow 
storms struck the east. 


Joseph operated heavy 
equipment during the clearing 
operations. He is a member of 
Company C, 27th Engineers 
Brigade, stationed at Fort 
Bragg, N.C. 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 


NIGHT— SATURDAY 10 A.M. ’TIL 9 P. M; 


PAIL TCD eo 


STRANGE THINGS HAPPEN WHEN THE MOON IS FULL! NOW DURING TIPTON’S MOONLIGHT 
MADNESS SAL, WHEN THE MOON IS BIG SO ARE TiPTON’S VALUES ON APPLIANCES, TV's 


AND SOUND S 


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Nama a Onn nella UT oN ae) 


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* PIONEER SX550 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER 


This populor Pioneer Receiver is Yhe perfect stort for @ superb 
system. Pioneer's famous quality “along with the variety of fea. 
tures on this unit will assure you ¢} years of listening enjoyment. 
Now super priced at 


Silver metollic, contemporary design and advanced pertor- 
mance highlight this proctically-priced receiver that gives you 
that most important feoture of Sansui’s receiver design; 
knowhow. Features include sensitive FM/AM tuners, loud- 
ness and bolance controls, bass/treble tone controls, 
capability to co two pairs of stereo speaker systems, 
‘and much more to enhance your listening pleasure. 


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THIS VERY POPULAR PIONEER CTF 2121 CASSETTE DECK is 0 
favorite of people who know oud components. This unit features 


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Deluxe front lood cassette deck with all the last minute fea. 
tures, dolby noise reduction, lorge VU meters and separate 
bios and equalization make this tape deck perform admirably 
with any brand of tope or music systems, Walnut case extra 
‘end additional 


j SPEAKER SYSTEM 
* «BLL, 9203 AUTOMATIC CHANGER Bossi: Se StEMs 


The B.1.C. 920) Changer combinis the. superidrity of a belt drive 
aystem with the convenience of changing records. Unit is complete 
with wolnut base and di 


KLH is a fine name in speokers and the 331's 
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SEE THE LARGEST DISPLAY OF 
APPLIANCES, 
TELEVISIONS & AUDIO 

IN.GRANITE CITY, ILL... 
3801 NAMEOKI RD. 
AT PONTOON 
CROSSROADS PLAZA 

SHOPPING CEN 


ANE) OTHER CREDIT 
MS AVAILABLE 


WEATHER has caused payement along 27th Street between Benton 

id State Streets. to become extremely rough. In the eens is the 27th. intersection 
at Avenue: The Quad-Cities have had s snaw cover for many weeks, 

(Press-Record Photo) 


Dra) ets 


Se me 





TT SPECIAL STORE 


GRADE "A" 
. . GOLDEN 


[a'Whole" 


Ib. , 
CUT-UP FRYERS ..... 
GRADE "A" 
CHICKEN LEGS ..... 


FRYING 


CHICKEN LIVERS. . ... 
KRETSCHMAR—SLICED FREE 


BONELESS HAMS .. 12° 


NO UNICARD HERE! 


COHEN'S will not be part of the new Unicard Check 
Cashing System being introduced by the Chain Super- 
markets. We will continue use of our own Cohen's 
‘Check Cashing Card in order to avoid the mandatory 
10° charge for personal checks with Unicard and the 
25* charge for payroll checks with Unicard. We also 
believe that you will find cashing a check at Cohen's 
will be faster and easier than the procedure required 
with Unicard. 


GRADE "A” 


CHICKEN BREASTS . 


99° 
GRADE "A’¥ 


CHICKEN THIGHS . .. . .89° 





oe a (0) 9 3 i 


Now . Bete eee ely 


bet Tate relat celal 
Lita te ig 


“CUP 

9° 
START YOUR 
“GRACIOUS” 


PATTERN IFRONSTONE SET TODAY! 


PRAIRIE FARMS 


= aM 
“ 


Full 
half 
= gal.’ 


79° 


CHAPMAN'S 


PRAIRIE FARMS 


ORANGE JUICE . 


PRAIRIE FARMS: 


NU TRISH MiLK 


FOX DELUXE 


PIZZA BREAD. . 


PIZZAS... . 
bb he Ent 


SC Ss” a 
CHICKEN NOODLE © St 
SOUP 


FARMER'S CHOICE "5 
French Fries 


Oe a courant IE | 


245 SAVE 50° © 


FRYERS 


DON'T 


\é 


oon 6% 


99° 
. 69° 


HICKORY SMOKED 


SHANK PORTION HAM . . . «. 


HICKORY SMOKED 


BUTT PORTION HAM ... 


BLUE BELL—VACUUM; PAK 


SLICED BOLOGNA 
SLICED BACON 

FRESH SLICED f 

BEEF LIVER 

DANISH DELIGHT: ‘COOKIES... . 
PILLSBURY—WHITE OR RASPBERRY 


ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX 


ALL VEGETABLE 


PURITANOIL............... 20S 79 


Co yf hai) couPOR 3 
“Gracious” 


re 
2 | 


CUP 
¢ 


Lirmit 2 witl eh each §10,00 
purchase. ‘Coupon 
Fee 1958 


VoUeUmeweweewar 22g 
DETERGENT : 
COLD POWER. s... 999 
HEIFETZ—DILL & ¢ 
HAMBURGER SLICES ="'59 


RED RIPE 


j AUNT MARTHA'S 
2 
3 
| 24-02. 
loaf 


TEXAS PINK 


EMPLE 
ORANGES 
GOLDEN DELICIOUS 


APPLES . . a 
WINESAP or APP 


_ {RED ROME 


DIAL 


BATH SOAP 


3.19" | 


nee srg a arity. 


\ OPEN MON: 


Sandwich Bread 


GRAPEFRUIT . 
12.99° 


FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS WELCOME 


x Where Ya: Sava.» 
aA. Dougha—_— 
2301 WLINOIS AVE. — GRaNtTe city 
ues. vue 


romser Poousts stames tvERy. TUESDAY omy 


FRESH LEAN 


Ground Beef 


85% 


EXTRA LEAN FAMILY PACK — 
BEEF STEW.2"=2.Mo~, 91.39 
QUARTER LOIN—SLICED 


PORK CHOPS ........ +71" 


FARMLAND—WHOLE A.C. 


BRAUNSCHWEIGER 


TASTI 


KREY SALAMI 


SEITZ 
SLICED BOLOGNA 


STAR-KIST 
CHUNK TUNA 
VAN CAMP 

PORK & BEANS 


SCOT LAD—-PEAS—GREEN BEANS 


GOLDEN CORN 
4 10%-02. G 9 


WITH COUPON BELOW 


10-Ib. 
Pkg. 


CAMPBELL'S 
Chicken Noodle 
SOUP 


SALTINES 


SCOT LAD CRACKERS 
SAAN DB AA IG 4 


PANTRY PACK GANDIES- 
coe 


1. wf 
A 


“$3.00 So at 


ONLY ee 1 


Individually Wiapped Bars 


3 Tomatoes 3. 99° 


10.88° 

359° 
o9° Skin... 239° 
FS ci... . 389° 


ior coupon 3 Te coupon 3 


Era. SAVE 16° Fra. SAVE 49° 
JOY # 

Giant 49" } 

22-02: : 


Limit 1 coupon per! 
ires 


YELLOW 


ONIONS .. 


FRESH 





a << 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD —Thurs., Feb.23,1978 Page 16 : 


i 


| ho turns grapes 


~p TRI-CITY and 
is Fe TOP VALUE 


TOP 
seeeernenerrenreerepeepneTEPTEPTERT VALUE 


Drapes, curtains, tablecloths and bed- SEGrriierstatretrrthy rtareehes bebe sega ger e reese A STamps 
spreads... plus cookware, appliances, f 

clothing, luggage and much more. They’re all i. ‘ 

free for the Top Value Stamps we give every- VBE 

day. And you’ll be amazed at how fast your Lt 

food purchases turn into the name-brand 
gifts you want most. Start turning your shop- 
ping into savings today . . . with Top Value 
Stamps! ‘ 


with this coupon and the purchase of 
$10.00 or more 
(excluding items prohibited by law) 


A 
p 
y 





te 
fend cane 


as 


US. Gov't: Inspected 
FRESH FRYER 


LEGQUARTERS 
BREASTQUARTERS 
Beef liver 


99 


Calves Liver “aes, 


Sandwich Bread 


HUNT'S 


Your 
Choice 


“ TURN:SHOPPING 
INTO SAVINGS 
EACH TIME YOU 

VISIT YOUR LOCAL 
-“TRI-CITY STORE... 
3250 Nameoki Rd. 
Granite City 


420 Broadway 
Venice 


HUNTER'S 
“Top-0-Morn” 
SLICED ~ 


J U.S. Graded “CHOICE” 


BONELESS 


Bottom Round $ 
e Rump or 

7 e@ Sirloin ak 

i (Your Choice) 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Limit One Bag 
With *10.00 
or More 
a Curd 


CUT FROM THE FINEST (ime 
CORN-FED PORKERS " 


“FAMILY PACK” 
Pork Steaks 


“4-lbs. 
or 
more” 





OUR VENICE & GRANITE CITY 
STORES WILL BE 


OPEN SUNDAY 


Sliced Bacon 
Skinless Wieners 
Braunschweiger 


uarnose™ 
231m. Pisces 


4 Boneless Steaks 


4\ Boneless Steaks 





ae 29 SAVE 18*t AMERICAN BEAUTY 


2: ie 
i. 


‘1 


Pork Cutlets 
Pork Roast 
Ground Beef 


‘SAVE 30c! PLAIN OR PEANUT 


M&M Candy 


MARTHA WHITE 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 17 


_ NOTICE 
ALL ITEMS IN THIS “AD” GOOD 
THRU TUES., FEB. 28 


TO DEALERS” 
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT! 


TRI A) Toros 

be LC ore Laon) 

cb 50 EXTRA a 

® “TOP VALUE STAMPS” @ 

5 WITH PURCHASE OF OME © 

2b. Bag "HyGrede” 
Regular or Het 

i oS POLISH SAUSAGE 

wn wi nM 


5 
od 


UT 
p 50 EXTRA 
D “TOP VALUE STAMPS" & 
iy WITH PURCHASE OF ONE 1) 


GROC. CO 
COUPON 


GROC. CO 
COUPON 
ge 


SC 


Egg Noodles 


Sy arc S 
=] fete] €5 


TANGY 


12-02. 55 
Can 


h shop 


SUPER LEAN... SLICED 


Boiled HAM 


Corn Muffin Mix 
butcher 


A” shoe 


SEAFOOD LENTEN SPECIALS 


“pounder FILLETS 


Tomato Paste | 


SAVE 10c! 





~~, 
a produce 
CALIFORNIA... “EASY TO PEEL” 


Navel Oranges 


‘~, 
Se produce 


EXTRA FANCY... WASHINGTON 
WINESAP 


‘APPLES 


(California Large 
140 Sie 


Sunkist Lemons 10... 99° 
Fruit Juice Drink & 99° 
Spanish Onions Ina Soot 2 19 


Tomato Ketchup 
MIRACLE SIX-STICK 


Whipped Margarine 


“Ee dairy 


“LIGHT 'N LIVELY” 


Cottage Cheese 


- 99 | 


Parkay, 2s Margarine 
Hungry Jack tv Biscuits 
Sealtest Sour Cream 


59" 
285.89" 
‘= 39 
‘SAVE 20c! PURE CHOCOLATE 
Nestle’s Morsels 
SAVE 78c! CHOCOLATE FLAVORED 


Deran’ s alps 


1 
COGN 
Pires 


“Debbie xix Detergent 2269" 
Sani-Flush, 
Depend-0 
DRY BEEF FLAVORED od 
Alpo Dinner 


._ SAVE T0e! SOIL ms STAIN REMOVER 


SAVE 10 


i Cleaner 


SN 


ONE 


69 


10:99 


Groc. CO 
COUPON 


TRI-CI 





Boneless Hams aS 
Beef For Stew 


Us, "CHOICE" 
bn Mere 





32-02 99° SAVE 18! CHILI HOT 


Keg 


259° | Brooks Beans 


2: 22.02 
Gins 


*1 





“ELF” 
VEGETABLES 


ms CUT GREEN BEANS 
/_-WHOLE KERNEL GOLDEN 
CORN or SWEET PEAS 
MIX or MATCH 


me J 240 


Brook's Chili Mix = 69° 
Veg-All Oh gala *5:37' 
Pork ’N Beans Heeiok. 


“JERSEY FARM” 
WHITE 


BREA 


Peampeeu's” 


SAVE 40° CASH! 
“Maxwell House” 


Flav-0-Rite c=, Creamer 
\ Solo: Foam Cups 





SAVE44'! FAIRMONTS 


ie $ 1" 
‘@ TACITAS, @ CHEESE 


2=°1" 


50° OFF 


CORNIES or e BARBECUE 
CORN aS. 


NY ar 0a SH 


~ DETERGENT a, 


$A 28. |. 
171-02. 2 ne 
FAMILY } 
EMIASE 


ae 


has YOUR SHOPPING DAY REBATE 
LABEL! Bas 


SEND nn Na 


 TiDE| [guar - 





5s i. 1" SAVE 201 FABRIC SOFTENER SHEETS 
: 40: 


BOUNCE =: 


Grapefruit 
Grapefruit 
Grapefruit 


‘SAVE ! 
Maxwell House Instant Coffee 10 $ A469 
vat 1° 9 


WELLESLEY FARMS 


Ice Cieam tal 


oe frozen 


foods 

SAVE 26°! “TOTINO’S” 
PIZZAS 
Pkg. 


mstamt 
COPE 


Manpleaser Dinners 
Rich's Bread Dough 


Sue 20c! LANDSHIRE oe 
Nike Sandwiches 
“SAVE 10c! "FLAV-O-RITE” FROZEN 


Crinkle Fries 
“NEW LITER BOTTLES” 


7-UP « 


1.B.C. Root Beer % 


ate + 
Bots. Dep. 


(This is 7.2-0z. Mors Than 8 - 16-oz. Bots.) 


50.4 39° 


. | Glad Tall Straws 


4 2 
“Blutseun 
HOT ROLL MIX 


OU a eens 
I rp 
H 


WE a eon 
i “Pe 


Groc. co 
COUPON 
We 


LE 


GROC. CO 
COUPON 


BUY 


GROC. CO 
COUPON 


TRI-CI 











Biomedical research by minority students 


Minority students at many 
major institutions are at a 
distinct disadvantage in having 
access to research in the 
sciences, Vernon. Archer 
believes, He is director of the 
Science Awareness Program at 
Southern. Illinois University at 
Edwardsville. 

“There is a grievous lack of 
members of minority groups 
participating in the biomedical 
sciences,” said Archer. “But 
SUE’ is doing something about 
i 

“This institution has a 
Specific program — Science 
Awareness that provides 
exposure and individualized 
training in biomedical research 
for  pre-college minority 
students.”” 

Archer said this week that 
research in the biomedical 
sciences is given top priority 
Status by scientists, the 
government and the public. 

Critical problems in disease 
prevention, treatment and 
‘health ‘care delivery have 
potential solutions in current 
biomedical research, it is felt. 
However, because of their 
socio-economic status, minority 
groups are thought to suffer 
acutely from underrepresenta- 
tion in the health. professions 

“For economic and — of even 
greater importance — moral 
reasons, major institutions 
must make sciences and must 
meet their long-neglected 
obligation to implement 
solutions to this national 
problem,” said Archer, 

The Science Awareness 
Program at SIUE came about 
becuse of underrepresentation 
of minorities in the fields of 
science and technology. The 
program was initiated in 1974 
under the guidance of Emil 
Jason, assistant vice-president 
for special programs and 
minority affairs. 

It is designed to provide pre- 
college and college experience 
for students who can benefit 
from advanced preparation in 
science and technology through 
structured classes and selected 
instructors who seek to develop 
the latent potential of students 
chosen for the program. 

Presently, the program in- 
volves students at Lincoln High, 
Assumption, E. St. Louis Senior 
High and Cahokia High School, 
totaling 1,168 student par- 
ticipants, 

Admittance is through staff 
evaluation, diagnostic exams, 
and recommendations by 
counselors. 

Individuals admitted to the 
program have the advantage of 

“selected professional staff as 
instructors and individually 
designed curricula. 

Each student has access to 
trained counselors on a need 
basis. Tutoring and extra 
academic aids are made 
available on request 

Carefully chosen diagnosti¢ 
examinations are given prior to 
the beginning of the program in 
an effort to provide correct 
placement of each student. 

Students, depending on their 
level of preparedness, are 
enrolled in geometry, physics, 
pre-calculus, biology, 
chemistry and reading classes 
Grades for college level courses 
are withheld until students 
enter college, and then, upon 
request, the grades are tran- 
sferred to their prospective 
schools. 

In an attempt to adequately 
evaluate the program, follow-up 
studies are conducted’ on as 
many students as possible to see 
if they continue on to college 
scientific material and per- 
field. 

“Often, students feel science 
careers require the thinking 
and aptitude of a genius. While I 
cannot say the science field is 
for everyone, I am certain more 
minority students can, if 
properly prepared and 
motivated, become successful 
in the field,” Archer said. 

He feels minority students do 
not have “sufficient role 
models” with respect to the 
area of science. 

“They have no real feeling for 
what the scientist does. Many of 
them have no idea as to the 
possible careers available to 
them upon graduation. In ad- 
dition, many of them have not 
had enough __ preparatory 
courses in science to adequately 
prepare them in the field. 

“What* happens is that 
students come to school with an 
intent of going into science, take 
an introductory course, quickly 
feel they are not adequately 
prepared due to a lack of high 
school preparation, and become 
disillusioned,’'. Archer said. 

He pointed out that, according 
to new statistics, 70 percent of 
all minority students are 
enrolled in major institutions, 
but 80 percent: of all black 
graduates come from minority 
institutions. “This should also 
tell us something,” he said. 

“The problems of minority 
students at major colleges 
compared to those at minority 
institutions are quite different. 

“At predominately black 
colleges, inadequate science 
facilities, equipment, trained 
personnel, curricula, funds, 
etc., are oe barriers to 
active pursuit of careers in 
science, 


scienctific material and per- 
sonnel are generally abundant 
and pf the highest quality, and 
yet very few minority students 
undertake independent study in 
the physical and-or life scien- 
ces. 


institutions must recognize the 


“At major institutions, 


by 


“Staff personnel at these 


problem and make an effort to 
alleviate it,” Archer said. 
Reasons for low levels of 
participation of minority ‘un- 
dergraduates 
projects are numerous, Archer 
is convinced. Active exclusion 


discrimination is not a major 
factor, 


in scientific 
mea 


departments or overt 


but more insidious 


Jchnuckf 


...where youre 


causes include: 
—Lack of communication 
between minority students and 
staffs of science departments. 
—Failure_ to 


ningful 


establish 
and personal 
relationships between staff and 
minority students, 
—Inadequate preparation of 
some minority students for 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


quantfiative aspects of science. 

—Ttaditional patterns of 
selection of undergraduate 
trainess which result in ex- 
clusi¢h of many minority 
students. 

—Igjorance of and in- 
sensitivity to the problems on 
the pakt of staff members; and 

oe of self-confidence on 
the part of the minority students 


and S$ unawareness that 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 18 


biomedical research is an 
available and viable career goal 
for them. 

Archer hopes that the Science 
Awareness’ Program will 
eventually evolve into a science 
academy where there will be a 
central place for students to go 
throughout the. day for in- 
struction and laboratory work. 

He said a science academy 
would provide students with 


broadened classroom 
curriculum with two major 
focal points: fundamental 
skills, intensive scientific 
studies. 


In addition to the broadened 
classroom curriculum, the 
academy would include 
seminars, training, independent 
research, career exposure and 
other program activities. 


IN FIRMIN DESLOGE. 
Earl “Red’’ Stenitzer, 60, of 
1111 Grand Ave., Madison, a 


, retired employee of Schermer’s 


Supermarket, - Madison, is 
recuperating from major 
‘sur in Room 403 at Firmin 
Desage Hospital, St. Louis. He 

lowed to have visitors, the 
family said. 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 


UCKS... .THE VALUE 


ci aaa _BUY THE BRANDS YOU PREFER 


yy tee me yi) 


eet ee cats Ce Plus 


SAVE 16¢—BORDEN’S 


Lite Line 
Yogurt. . 


SAVE 16¢—PRAIRIE FARMS—FRESH 


Skim Milk......... 


AMERICAN—EACH SLICE WRAPPED 


Borden Singles..... 


KRAFT—CRACKER BARREL 


Sharp Cheddar Sticks‘: 


RASKAS—EXTRA SMOOTH 


Cream Cheese...... 32 


BLUE BONNET 


Soft Spread .. 


REGULAR OR BUTTERMILK 


Pillsbury Biscuits . 4. 


everyday 


SMOOTH 
PRAIMM FARMS 


Sour Cream . 


TANGY 
PRAIRIE FARMS 


16-07. 
Cn. 


-69 
-69 


16-07 


16-02. 
Cin. 


49° 
149 
1.29 
49 
as t79 
‘68 


Halt 
Gal. 


16-07. 
Pkg. 


real values 
CRESCENT 
Pause? 
Dinner Rolls. . 


4 STICK 
curren 


Soft Margarine . 


.. Gn 59 
Pig. 59 


SAUSAGE SHOPPE 


SAUSAGE SHOPPE—ALL VARI 


Potato Salad... 


DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT—SLICED 


MADE FRESH IN OUR SAUSAGE SHO 
PEPPERONI PIZZAS—EACH $1.89 


Cheese Pizzas 


GERMAN STYLE—NATURAL CASING 


Bratwurst... 


WISCONSIN—SLICED 


IETIES 


oe 


1.49 
1.99 


PPE 


12 In. 


Hollenbach Thuri 


suceD 


Baby Seis Swiss Cheese is. 2.99 


SAVE 20¢ WITH COUPON 


“NANCY Al 


Hot Cross 
Bums........ 


SAVE 10¢ 


Fe 
wiscousim Poay 


Cheddar Cheese. . “iv. 2.49 


INE"’—LENTEN FAVORITE 


“NANCY ANNE’’—OLD FASHION 


Glazed 
Cake Donuts. . 


BETTY CROCKER 
Recipe Card Library 


Men’ 
and Children's 
Parties 


Cee 


SAVE 31¢ 


PRAIRIE FARMS 
BUTTER-%’s 


chs 
6.:. Q 


FAMILY LIBRARY 
OF GREAT MUSIC 
“Volume 8 
Schubert's 


Teaunteiahed 
srmphery | No. 5 


Cer 
SAUSAGE SHOPPE 


SAVE 50¢ 


On the Purchase 
of a Pound or More 
WISCONSIN 
LOG OF BEEF 
spon Exptss tats Fate Ai tare. 


een 


Lice Ih 


SAVE 13¢ 


Every Day is Savings Day in the Meat Department of your nearby Schnucks Store. 
Not just a few items to save on, but everything is priced for Real Value 


Every Day 


U.S.D.A.—GRADE 'A’— 


GOLDEN WEST 


Whole . 


Fryers. |. 


REG. OR ALL BEEF—12 ‘OZ. PKG. 


B5¢ 


Hunter 


Wieners eed 


HICKORY SMOKED 
FRESH FROM THE SLAB 


Sliced Bacon 


Full 
e@ bb. 


1.39 Beet 


FROM IOWA COUNTRY—VAC.PAK 


SLICED—FARMLAND 


Bacon 


ee ee oe Pkg 


1.19 


12-02. 


FARMLANDS—MAPLE RIVER © 


SLICED FREE—WHOLE 


Bniless. Hams 


REG. OM ALL BEEF 
SLICE! 


Krey Bol lognd ‘: 


» 1.79 
1.19 


Full 


PRIDE ey, THE ee SANCY 


QUARTER LOIN 


Pork Chops... . ... 


1.39 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE—EXTRIA FANCY — 


Boneless 
Chuck Roast i 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 


Extra Fancy 
Arm Roast ... 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 


Bnils.. ee 
Pot meer kin, 


POND RAISED—PAN READY . 


Fresh 
Channel Catfish. 


2° 


SAVE 20¢ 


“NANCY ANNE” 
HOT CROSS BUNS 


Bx. . 


1.19 
1.29 


any time you shop. 


99 


2B. OR MORE PAK 
LEAN & TENDER 


Beef for Stew . 


U.S.0.A. CHOICE 
“CENTER CUT 


Round Steaks . 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 
LARGE END 


Rib Steaks . . 


WHOLE PORK BUTT SLICED 
PRIDE OF THE FARM 


Pork Steaks . 


4.LB. OR MORE PAK 


Pork Steaks . 


1.39 


FARMLANDS—A.C. 
BY THE PIECE 


Braunschweiger ... 69 


REGULAR OR HOT 


A.C. ROLL—HUNTER 


Pork Sausage 


TENDER—YOUNG 
SLICED 


tb 89 
lb @ 


Beef Liver........69 


HICKORY SMOKED 
FULLY COOKED: 


Shank Port.Ham ...79 


REGULAR—FRESH GROUND—4 LB, PAK 


real value specials 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 


Center Cut 
Chuck Roast 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 


Blade Cut 
Chuck Steak 


GREAT WITH HAM AND BEANS 


Large Meaty 


Smoked Mocks ai 


BOOTH—FROZEN 


Perch Fillets & 


YNEW"* FROM .BOOTH—HEAT AND EAT 
GATTER DIPPED 


Fish Fill 


FLASH FROZEN—IN THE SHELL 
\S—LARGE 36 TO 42 2 
Gulf Shrim 


SAVE 20¢ 
Post cencAL 
SUGAR CRISP. 


14-02. 
Pkg. 


NOT LESS THAN 70% LEAN 


Ground Beef... .. .99 


98 
98 
89: 


Flounder 


1.79 
1.79 


Cen 


SAVE 10¢ 
OREO Cov COOKIES 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD. 


Thurs:. Feb. 23.1978 Page 19 


Jud 'y McNeilly, Barbara Harris, Norma Mendoza, Liz Neeley, 7 others honored 


Eleven area women have 
been named to 1978 winners of 
the Alice Paul Achievement 
Awards by the Southern Illinois 
University at Edwardsville 
chapter ‘of the National 
Organization for Women. 

Gertraude Wittig, chair- 
person of the Alice Paul Awards 
and a professor of biology at 
SIUE, said the awards are 


LEADER IN FAMOUS BRANDS 


AT PRICES YOU CAN’T BEAT 


given to “women volunteers 
who show courage, dedication 
and empathy toward their 
sisters and~“who .work toward 
improvement of the status. of 
women.” 

Prof. Wittig said area 
organizations were invited to 
forward nominations of both 
members, and non-members to 
SIUE-NOW. 


“All 1978 award recipients are 
well-known among area women 
for their extensive, tireless 
volunteer work in the women’s 
cause and for carrying the spirit 
of this cause into all their ac- 
tivities,” she said. 

This year’s recipients are: 

—Judy McNeilly of Granite 
City. Currently a homemaker, 
she is the mother of two 


real value special 


SAVE 76¢—LESS THAN HALF PRICE 


KRAFT 


Miracle 


32-0z. 


ot Ta 


ONE LIMIT— WITH $7.50 OR MORE ll hh cali 


PR 
We pick the 


BUT THE BIG 
72 SIZE Cy 


ODUCE 
Quality . 


Sunkist Oranges 


NAVEL 
72 SIZE 


36 COUNT PAK—$4.99 
WASHINGTON—EXTRA FANCY—GOLDEN 


Delicious Apples ... 


FLORIDA—CRISP 


Pascal Celery . . 


Large 
Stalk 


in Schnucks Floral Shoppe 
SAVE 50¢ WITH COUPON 


Lush - Assort 


6 Inch 
Pots 


Tropical Foliage . . «.-. 


7-98: 


TEXAS—JUICE PACKED—48 SIZE 


Red Grapefruit 


CALIFORNIA—EXTRA SWEET 


Minneola Tangerines . 


THE TRUE SALAD FAVORITES 


Cherry Tomatoes. . 


ADD FLAVOR TO ROAST OR SOUPS 


Golden Carrots 


U.S. NO. 1—ALL PURPOSE 


Red Potatoes... 


children and is a graduate 
assistant at SIUE. 

While working toward her 
bachelor of. arts degree at 
SIUE, she received the Hudlin 
Award (1977) and Estes Award 
(1976). 

Mrs. McNeilly was employed 
12 years as a secretary and 
bookkeeper and has done. ex- 
tensive volunteer work in area 


rape intervention programs 
from 1973 to the present. 
—Bafbara Harris of Granite 
City. Ste is a homemaker with 
three ¢hildren and a graduate 
student and assistant at SIUE. 
As an undergraduate student 
at the university; she was a 
membér of the, Deans College 


Mrs. Harris worked -four 
years as a PBX operator, 
secretary and receptionist. She 
has done extensive volunteer 
work in area rape intervention 
programs from 1976 to the 
present. 

—Gladys Levis of Alton, a 
homemaker with four children 


University, St. Louis;where she 
received her bachelor of science 
degree. She has been active in 
the National Federation of 
Republican Women and helped 
form the League of Republican 
Women in Alton. 

Mrs. Levis has done extensive 
volunteer work in civic and 


community — organizations, 
including the YWCA, Oasis, Girl 


and a member of the Board of 
Trustees of Washington 


Schnuckf 


..-.where you're 
among friends 


and Kappa Kelta’ Pi National 
Educa\ion Honor Socjety 


real value special 


a) 
LORED 
perry 


at 


: you pick the Quantity 


Only the very best of produce passes the inspection of Schnucks buyers so you can be sare 
it's the finest available. You select how much or how little you want for your specific needs. 


YOUR CHOICE OF OVER 300 REBATE VALUES ALL THROUGH THE STORE 


Real value rebates are limited time reductions you receive from our special buys and manufacturer allowances 


which We pass directly on to you. Look for our blue shelf tags pointing to extra savings 


« REGULAR PRICE 296 
FISH OR SALMON—PUSS 'N BOOTS 


:Cat Food ....... 


© REGULAR PRICE $2.49 
GLITTER GREEN 


‘Cat Litter 


= REGULAR PRICE 73 
i KRAFT 


‘Bar-B-Q Sauce .... 


“REGULAR PRICE 63¢ 
KRAFT 


Grape Jelly ....-. 


Pee Vai eel a 
CREAMETTES 


Long Spaghetti 


71% 


soc. 69: 


REG. 51¢ 


2 


REG. 74¢ 


Ragu Spaghetti Sauces 


16-0. 
Pkgs. 


15 4-07. 
Can 


.. 102, 2.39 


18-02. 
Bot. 


18-02. 
Jar 


REGULAR PRICE 8 
DELUXE—KRAFT 
Macaroni 


REGULAR PRICE 51 
CHICKEN—KRAFT 


‘Noodle Di 


REGULAR PRICE 36 


26, 


65 
.69 


REGULAR PRICE 7! 
KRAFT 


:PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., FEB. 25, 1978. 


Cars 


SAVE $1.80 
‘ COFFEE 


RETR Z 


SAVE 50¢ 
TROPICAL 


6i OZ PROS —-SPIRAL—KRAFT 


3¢ 


& Cheese 


06 


14-07. 
Pkg. 


719 
55 


7-02. 


MOE Seis Pkg. 


& Cheese 


5 


Peers 


SAVE 30¢ 


HEFTY.TALL 
KITCHEN. BAGS ! 


OuPON 


3..1.00 


Peanut Brittle... . ‘ia: .69 


real value special 
~ ENRICHED — WHITE 


REGULAR PRICE 98¢ 


Liquid Drane..... 


REGULAR PRICE $1.29 
BEHOLD—LEMON 


Furniture Polish . 


REGULAR PRICE 23¢ 


Old Dutch Cleanser 


REGUEAR PRICE S159 


Sole Deg Feed, . 52; 1.49 


everyday ey Seti 
ALL FLAVORS 


Regular or Diet 
Staff Soda 


12-0. 
Can 


Cees 


THE STANNERY 


‘ee a 1.49! is 


SAVE 12¢ 


4 
a SCE 


6... 88° 
For GDA 
7 -. 88° 

58 
oe 0» Pint 


. 22,58 
oe ule 5% 


SAVE 10¢ 


ey a 
vice 


49: 


FROZEN 


Ag 


UNSWEETEWED 


Cae 
TU 


SAVE 30¢ 
14-02. 


es 
Boston Bonnie ::: 


Glazed Donuts 65 


LIKE HOMEMADE 


Reames Noodles... 6 


Peas or Niblet Corn fae 
99 


SvEles= sar 
Beef Enchiladas. . 
FOUR VARIETIES—11 OZ. TO 12 OZ, 
no. 1.49 

CUR VAninres =PepEHRCatran 
Layer Cakes........ 1.49 
rive Vanetes!-CaNataT 

2s, 1.69 


17-02 
Size 


Fox Pizza Breads. 
Meat Entrees 


SEND FOR A * 


I % CASH 


ON YOUR tae 
SHOPPING BILL Duncan Hines Brownie Mix 
“MAXIMUM REBATE $3.50 | Pringie's twin Pack 


FOR FULL DETAILS CHECK THE DISPLAY 
AT YOUR LOCAL SCHNUCKS STORE 


Mail in one 
prices of the 
and the net 
menté from fine brands totaling at 
Jeast 36 points along with-the required 
certificate found on display in our s 

Crisco Oil 48 oz. 12 


register tape with the 


4 points 
6 points 


8 points 
6 points 


HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS 


99 
39 


SAVE 40¢—INTENSIVE CARE 


Vaseline Bath Beads. . 


SAVE 15¢—CUTEX 


Polish Remover...... 


SAVE 20€—VASELINE 


Petroleum Jelly . . 


18-02, 
Pkg. 


4-02. 
Bot. 


7.5-02 


320r. 
Bot. 


89 
1.19 
21 


Schnucks Coffee .. . 2: 5.59 
Staff Salt.......... %2 15 
Seo 49 


Recipe Flour. ...... 
. 52, 99 
‘e. 3S 


PURE CANE 


Staff Sugar... . 


FANCY 
Staff Aislin, soars 
SAVE 64¢ 
INTENSIVE CARE 
VASELINE LOTION 


12-02. 
Can 


17-02, 
Can 


LITER BOTS.—PLUS DEPOSIT—SAVE 7 1c 


Seven Up or 
IBC Root Beer «4. 


SAVE $1.25 
COTTON SWABS: 
Q-TIPS 


oe 2125.3 hes 


Scouts, Illinois Children's Home 
and Aid;-League of Women 
Voters and First Presbyterian 
Church in Alton. She is the 
president of ERA Madison 
County. 

—Norma Mendoza of Tanite 
City. She’ is a. homemaker, 
mother of six’ children and 
assistant director of the 
Belleville Area College Retired 
Senior Volunteer Programs. 

An active Democrat, she was 
a candidate for city clerk im 
Granite City in 1977, 

Mrs. Mendoza is president of 
the Metro-East NOW Chapter. 
She is active in area ethnic 
organizations and ~ does 
volunteer work for senior 
citizens and area women’s 
organizations. 

—Pamela Klein of Collin- 
sville. Mrs. Klein is. a 
homemaker, mother of three 
children and coordinator of the 
Rape and Sexual Abuse Care 
Center at SIUE. 

She received her bachelor of 
arts and master of science 
degrees from SIUE and is a 
staff member of the Tran- 
sactional Analyst Institute of St. 
Louis, Inc 

For six years she owned, 
operated and directed a state- 
accredited nursery school. She 
has been active in volunteer 
work in rape intervention, crisis 
intervention, ‘‘Oasis’’ and 
related area programs since 
1974. 

—Vickie Sheridan of 
Belleville. A homemaker and 
student at Belleville Area 
College, she is a_ personal 
banking Fepresentative in St 
Louis. She does volunteer work 
for area women's 
organizations, including the 
League of Women Voters. Mrs. 
Sheridan is president of St. 
Clair-Madison NOW 

Dorothy Fontana of East 
Alton. She is a homemaker, 
mother of two children and a 
business education teacher. She 
is a graduate of SIUE. 

Mrs. Fontana has served on 
Wood River Township com- 
mittees, including the Park 
Advisory and Community 
Development Advisory com- 
mittees. She is a Democrat and 
is: active in area League of 
Women Voters and other 
women’s organizations. 

—Betty: Maloney of Edward- 
sville, a homemaker, mother of 
four and a student at SIUE. She 
received her bachelor of arts 
degree from Middlebury 
College in Vermont and master 
of arts degree from Columbia 
University in New York. 

Among her volunteer ac- 
tivities, ‘Mrs. Maloney is 
secretary of the Edwardsville 
Human Relations Commission 
and chairman of the Edward- 
sville Township Community 
Improvement Cooperative, and 
has held many offices in the 
Edwardsville League of Women 
Voters. 

—Eva McDonald of Alton, a 
homemaker and full-time 
volunteer. Retired from 
teaching the’sixth grade after 38 
years, she received 
bachelor of arts degree from 
SIU at Carbondale and her 
master of science degree from 
the University of Iinois. Her 
honors include membership in 
Delta Kappa Gamma Honorary 
Education Society and the 
Distinguished Service award 
for Community Service of the 
Alton Education Association. 

A member of the Com: 
on Family, Illinois Commission 
on the Status of Women, she has 
done volunteer work with the 
Alton American Association of 
University Women, of which she 
is aformer president, the Alton 
Business and Professional 
Women, Oasis, Alton League of 
Women Voters, Lovejoy 
Presbytery, the Task Force for 
Women, and the Equal Rights 
Amendment Political Action 
Committee of ERA Illinois. 


—Liz Neeley, formerly- of 
Madison, now of Granite City, 
She is the action vice-president 
of Illinois NOW, and ERA 
coordinator for’ Southern 
Minois, plus Coordinator of the 
ERA-NOW Center in Granite 
City. 

She interrupted her studies at 
SIUE to devote full-time to her 
volunteer work for passage of 
the ERA. 

She served with the U.S. 
Army and the Illinois Natidnal 
Guard before begifning her 
studies at SIUE. She Has 
worked as a personnel 
management. specialist, | per- 
sonnel manager and veterans’ 
service counseling director. 

‘A posthumous award was 
given to Ida McFarlane of 
Alton, who died in November. A 
homemaker and Alton civic 
leader, she was cited for her 
many volunteer activities” in 
civic and women’s groups. 

She was a member of the 
board of Lovejoy Scholarship 
Fund, a committee member of 
the Madison County Etonomic 
Opportunity Commission, a 
member of the state com- 
mission on selection of students 
for community scholarshij 
and a board member of 
Alton YMCA. A ’ forms 


se the ae 





MR. AND MRS. HOMER. SMITH. They were 
married in an evening ceremony in the home of the 
bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R.. Westbrook, 


2432 Logan Ave. 
Westbrook. 


She is 


Cheryl Westbrook becomes 


formerly ‘Cheryl Elaine 


Mrs. Homer Lindell Smith 


Miss Cheryl Elaine West- 
brook and Homer Lindell Smith 
exchanged wedding vows, on 
Feb. 4, in an evening ceremony 
conducted in the home of the 
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas R. Westbrook, 2432 
Logan Ave. 

Officiating at the 7 o'clock 
service was the Rev. C. M. 
O'Guin. 

The groom is’a son of Mrs. 
Christine Smith of Doniphan, 
Mo. 

For her wedding the former 
Miss Westbrook chose a formal 
length pastel yellow organza 
gown fashioned with a white 
reembroidered bodice with a 
high neckline and long bishop 
sleeves. 

The gathered . skirt ter- 
minated at the hemline with a 
deep flounce, defined by a wide 


band of white lace. She held a 
bouquet of yellow carnations, 
baby's breath and sprigs of 
greenery, festooned with long 
White satin streamers. 

Honor attendant was Sandra 
Fish and the best man was Troy 
Smith, a brother of the groom. 

Miss Paula Brown,‘a niece of 
the bride, ‘presided over the 
guest book at a reception given 
at the First United Pentecostal 
Church hall, 2450 Pontoon Road. 
The newlywed couple received 
200 guests during the, evening. 

The former Miss Westbrook 


attended Granite City High 


School South and the groom 
attended Doniphan, Mo., High 
school. 

They are now residing in 
Granite City’ following a wed- 
ding trip to the Missouri Ozarks. 


CIONKO’S 


Quality and Service at Reasonable Prices 


29th & Madison Ave. 


Prices Good Thry Sat., 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 
PIKES PEAK 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 
ROLLED RUMP 
ROAST.... 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 
SIRLOIN TIP 


‘BANQUET ” 
DINNERS... 


BIRDSEYE 


Granite City 


25,1978 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 
Thors., Feb. 23,1978 «. Page 20 


Janet Phipps 
bride elect 

The engagement of Miss 
Janet Phipps and Mark Smiddy 
is announced. by the bride- 
elect’s: parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Richard Phipps, Rural Route 
One, Granite City. 

Parents of the’ prospective 
groom are Mrs. Marilyn 
Smiddy, 300 Wilson Park Lane, 
and Phil. Smiddy of Oakwood, 
ml. 

Miss Phipps will graduate in 
June from Granite City High 
School North. 

Her fiance is a'1976 graduate 
of South High School and. is 


présently employed at LeRoy’s 


“Market. x 

Plans are being completed by 
the engaged couple for an Aug. 
12 wedding. 


Instruction class 
for Delray members 


The Valentine meeting of 
Delray 786;Rebekah Lodge was: 
held at the‘Odd Fellows Hall in 
Madison, and -also featured a 
school of inbtructionsfor newly 
_ flected “officers conducted’ by 
“Mrs. Daisy Burnett. 

Noble Grand Betty Applegate 
was in charge‘of the business 
segment. She announced the 
chapter will be in charge of the 
memorial services;for District 
26 spring meeting set for March 
15, in Alton. Mrs. Zélma Finch 
was appointed to serve as 
chairman of the Services. 

Mrs. Thelma Stockton was 
elected delegate to represent 
the local chapter at the district 
meet. , 

Members voted’ to send 
donations to the Educational 
Loan Fund and: the Illinois 
Heart Foundation: 

Red roses and cupids were 
used to decorate the hall in 
obsérvance of Valentine day. 

Refreshments were served by 
Mrs: Applegate to Ruth Han- 
nebrink, Lucille Veach, Pearl 
Wood, Zelma Finch, Opal Voss, 
Hazel Wheeler, Aletha Lassen, 
Dorothy Bertram, Irene Dawes, 
Marie Ziegler, Linda Butts, 
Betty Barnett, Edith Carpenter, 
Carrie Gresham, Verna 
Wilman, Thelma Stockton, 
Kathie Applegate and Agnes 
Meng. 


MAYROSE 


MAYROSE 


WIENERS 


MAYROSE 


BROWN 'N SERVES... 
U.S.D.A. Choice 


ROUND 
STEAK....... 


U.S.D.A. CHOICE 


RIB 


STEAK. 


MAYROSE 


FRESH, LEAN 


$ l 49 BOLOGNA 


ORANGE PLUS 


‘PET RITZ 


» PIE SHELLS... 


LARGE CALIF. 


Navel Oranges . 
RUBY RED 
Grapefruit. 


LARGE VINE RIPENED 


Te¥natoes 


U.S. NO. 1 MEDIUM 


Yellow Onions 
U.S.NO. 1 


Red Potatoes. 


== "COUPON 
Mazola 


Corn Oil 


1s 


With This‘Coupon 
and $5.00 Purchase 
This Coupon Sree ot 
a = ob, et ove 


A Pa 00 
. Ib. 39° 


10m 89° 


Mrs. Bufterworth's 


Sy rup 
mt PR. 


With This Coupon 
and $5.00 Purchase 


This Coupon Good Only at 
‘ionko's Market Through 


TO WED. Miss Janet 


Smiddy. Their engagement is being 


bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. 
Rural Route One, Granite 
planned. 


Shower honors 
Mrs. Snelson 


Mrs. James (Mary Ruth) 
Snelson was honored at a cradle 
shower Sunday afternoon given 
‘by Mrs. Harriet Byers and her 
daughter, Mrs. Jeffrey Git- 
tinger of Cincinnati, Ohio, at the 
Byers residence. 

Yellow decorations were used 
for the gift and luncheon table 
with a Teddy Bear motif. 

Games were directed by the 
“hostesses followed by the guest 
of honor opening,her gifts. 

Guests attending were 
Mesdames John -Relleke, 
Kenneth Bolton, Ray Logan, 
Robert McBride, Lee Gon- 
terman, Joe Grant, David 
Snelson and the grandmothers- 
to-be Mrs. Art Snelson and Mrs. 
Allen Cox. 

Also Misses Regina Snelson, 
Katie Crawford, Jean 
Granklanoff, Judy Grant and 
Dena Takmajian 


EXPERT APPRAISING 
MORRISS REALTY CO. 
876-4400 


12-0z. 
. Pkg 


$429 
99° 
99° 


Yelb 


8-07. 
Pkg. 


$799 


GROUND CHUCK 


. IN 5-LB. PKGS. 
FOLGER'S 


FLAKED 
COFFEE 


JUMBO 
TOWELS 


Pan ie an 5 5* 


HEINZ BONUS PACK 


VAN CAMP 

PORK 'N BEANS .-.. 
SEALTEST 
ICE-CREAM...... 


BETTY CROCKER, REG LAYER 


CAKEIMIXES. 2s. 6 gee ete 


32-93. 


».. 285% 
111, 8a 89" 


ga $ 1 39 


59° 


19.508: 
+ Pho. 


NOODLES............... 282 89% 


‘LAUNDRY DETERGENT 


SWEET SUE 


CHICKEN ‘N DUMPLINGS. ... 


HEIFITZ DILL HAMBURGER 
‘SLICED PICKLES . 
cooKBOOK 


BREAD. ........ 
SHURFINE 


GREEN BEANS.... 


SHURFINE WK, or CR. STYLE 


GOLDEN CORN . . 


SHURFINE. 
APPLESAUCE.... 
=== COUPON =-4 
Betty er 4 
| SMACKIN' 
‘CAKE MIX 


12-02. 


r 
5 
' 
' 
1 
a 


With This Coupon 
and $5.00 Purchase 
This Coupon Good Only at 
Sentmenes ugh a 
Sato job. 25, 1978 


49-02. 


$7139 


22798 
269° 
2 29° 
389° 
3289* 
.22,75° 


= = COUPON '= 
_ Final Touch 
FABRIC . 

SOFTENER: ' 
33-ox. > 1 
B83" i 
With This Coupon 
and $5.00 Purchase, 


This Coupon Good Only at 
nko's Market Through 


Phipps antl her fiance Mark 
nounced "by the 
aid Mrs; Richard. Phipps, 
City. An Aes. 12 wedding is 


Bethesda Temple 


hosting revival 

The Rev. Nora (Hasner) Leh- 
man, formerly of Plant City, 
Fla., is conducting revival 
services each evening at 7:30 at 
Bethesda Temple, 22nd and 
State streets, according to the 
host pastor, the Rev. Charles E. 
Browning. 

Rev. Lehman is a musican 
and singer and has been 
associated with several 
professional groups in Florida 
and won the state quartet 
trophy in 1971 with the singing 
Lacy Family. She was pianist 
and soloist for the Old 
Fashioned Quartet of Lakeland, 


* Fla. 


‘ During her ministry she has 
organized.two new churches in 
the last year, indluding New 
Mission Church of Manito, Il, 

and Christian, Faith’ Center, 


“Table Grove, Tl. 


The guest speaker also 
ministers to three nursing 
homes on a monthly basis as 
well ‘as participating in 
evangelistic meetings and 
pastoring the Christian Faith 
Center, Rev. Browning added. 


TO MARRY. Miss Judine Marie Bruch and Vernon 


Lynn Kux, whose engagement and plans for a May 12 


are being annouwriced by 


the bride-to-be's 


Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Bruch, 2731 Michigan 


(Gravemann Photo) 


Lux-Bruch engagement told 


Mr. atid Mrs. Walter L. 
Bruch, 2731 Michigan Ave., are 
announcifig the engagement of 
their darghter,Miss Judine 
Marie Brich and Vernon Lynn 
Lux, a sn of Mrs. Willamae 
Lux of Grijnite City, and the late 
James Liix. 

Both young people graduated 
from Granite City High School 
South in 1972 and both attended 
Southern Illinois University at 


Van Hulzen-Ward nuptials 


Edwardsville. 

Miss Bruch is presently 
employed at Huebner Hard- 
ware and the prospective groom 
is working as an apprentice 
electrician at Granite City 
Steel. 

The betrothed couple and 
their families are completing 
plans for a May 12 wedding to 
take place at Sacred Heart 
Catholic Church 


at First Baptist Church 


The Wedding of Miss Linda 
Kay Vaij Hulzen, a daughter of 
Mr. an Mrs. Andrew Van 
Hulzen, 73148 Myrtle Ave., and 
David Lynn Ward, a son of Mr. 

eand Mré, Burl Ward, Galatia, 
Ill, was jolemnized on Nov. 5 at 
the First Baptist Church, in 
Galatia. * 

The Kev. Roy Hughes of- 
ficiated }at the double ring 
ceremonjy at 2 p.m. Wedding 
music ir#luded, “My Tribute,” 
“Wedding Prayer,” “Take Our 
Love” aijd the Lord’s Prayer. 

Given ‘in marriage by her 

bride wore a long A- 
line stylé white organza gown 
designed with an Empire bodice 
planed {with Alencon lace and 
seed pe: 

The ‘décorative trim was 
repeated jon the bishop sleeves 
and’a small bow marked the 
back waiftline. 

A Juliefcap of lace and pearls 
secured her fingertip veil. She 
carried @ bouquet of : white 
orchids “entered with - blue 
Carnation, lavendar pom pons 
and gréen star flowers, 


festooned?-with white . velvet - 


ing: 

Maid of honor was Miss‘Tricia 
Franklami and bridesmaids 
were Mis Judy Elledge and 
Miss Dori Reese. 

They ose - formal: le 
eset ale 
aqua polyester with round 
necklines and complemented 
with flofal print chiffon 
capelets. 

Each attendant carried .an 
arrangement of white and blue 


Jon, Ward, fas best man: ‘Gary 
Grunschel: and Christopher 


Rane, Sree 


The bride attended Southern 
Illinois University at Edward- 
sville and Southwestern 
Seminary and was active in the 
Baptist Student Union, there. 

Her husband attended SIU- 
Carbondale and also belonged 
to the Baptist Student Union. 

They are now residing in 
Eldorado after a wedding trip to 
Evansville, Ind. 


3715 


NAMEOKI 
Len & Lynn 


MILK STORES 


MR. AND MRS. JAMES ZARUBA whose wedding 
was solemnized at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. 
Formerly Miss Rita Anne Ahlers, the bride is a daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard E. Ahlers, 2441 Iowa St. 


(Fechte Phowo) 


Sacred Heart scene of 
Zaruba-Ahlers wedding 


Miss Rita Anne Ahlers, a 
daughter. of Mr. and Mrs. 
Bernard E. Ahlers, 2441 Iowa 
St., became the bride of James 
“Ed” Zaruba, a son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Frank E. Zatuba, 2514 
Lynch Ave., on Feb, 11 at 
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic 
Church. 

Father James ‘Hill officiated 
at the double ring ceremony at 2 
o'clock in the afternoon before 
an altar adorned with pyramid 
bouquets of carnations, pom 
pons and greenery. 

Escorted to the altar by her 
father, the bride wore a long 
white organza gown designed 
with an Empire bodice with a 
high neckline, accented with 
Alencon lace motifs, and long 
bishop sleeves cuffed with 
matching lace. 

The A-line skirt and chapel 
train was also enhanced with 
bands of Alencon lace. 

Her fingertip veil edged with 
Alencon lace, etched with 
pearls, was held in place by a 
lace Juliet cap.,She held a 
bouquet of roses, daisies, pom 
pons and baby’s breath tied 
with lace streamers. 

Attending the bride as honor 
attendant was her sister, Mrs. 
Pat ‘Atkins. Bridésmaids in- 
eluded Mrs. Justine Thornton, 
another sister, Miss Barbara 
Koishor, Miss Bonnie Hografe 
and Miss Donna Keamme. 

They chose long cedar wine 
color polyester dresses 
designed with Empire bodices 
with square necklines and full 
pleated skirts, worn with 
matching capelets. 

Each attendant wore a floral 
headband in her hair to match 
the bouquet she carried. 

Serving as candlelighters 
were Rith and Anthony Harrell, 
cousins of the groom. 

The. groom chose __ his 
brother, Robert Zaruba, as best 
man. David Nolan, Joseph 
Toomey, David Eads, Greg, 
Glen and Scott Ahlers, brothers 
of the bride, and Russell 
Harrell, a cousin of the groom, 
completed the corps of 
groomsmen and ushers. 

A rehearsal dinner was 
served to members of the 
wedding party, at Lewis and 
Clark Restaurant. 


The newlyweds received 
guests at a reception held at the 
Polish Hall in Madison. 

They arrived home this week 
after a wedding trip to Orlando, 
Fla., and plan to reside in 
Granite City. 

The former Miss Ahlers 
graduated in May 1977 from 
Deaconess Hospital School of 
Nursing and is employed as a 
registered nurse at the St. Louis 
Hospital. 

Her husband was graduated 
from Wabash Valley Junior 
College in 1973 and presently 
works as ice rink manager for 
the Granite City Park District.’ 

For her daughter's wedding 
Mrs. ‘Ahlers selected a formal 
pink polyester A-line gown. The 
groom’s mother appeared in a 
floor length mint green 
polyester dress complemented 
with a floral cape in white and 
dark green hues. 


Attends wedding 
of grandson 


Mrs. John Burkett, 821_ 
Twenty-fourth St., is at home 
now, after attending the wed- 
ding of her grandson, Dennis J. 
Feldmann and the former 
Jacalynn Sherman, in Lit: 
chfield, Ill, on Feb, 11. 

Parents of the bride are Mr. 
and Mrs. James Sherman of 
South Litchfield, formerly of 
Granite City. The groom is a son 
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Feld- 
mann also of Litchfield. 

The Rev. Eugene Maritt, 
pastor of thé Good Shepherd 
United Methodist Church, 
Granite City; officiated at the 
ceremony in St, Timothy’s 
United Methodist Church, 
Litchfield. 

A reception was held at the 
Litchfield Country ‘Club im- 
mediately following — the 
ceremony. 


MARRIAGE 
COUNSELING 


Professional - Confidential 


931-6560 


2928 


NAMEOKI 
Bud & Holly 


OPEN 7 DAYS — 9 A.M. TO 10:30 P.M. 


HALF & HALF ......-220 


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IN 16-02. BTLS. 


g$7i9 


FOR 


PLUS DEPOSIT 


DAIRY SPECIAL 


Ran OOS 


Harrison's Grade ‘A’ 


R. B. RICE’S—Mild, Med., Hot 


‘SAUSAGE 


TONY'S eee 


25° OFF eis Price 


@ pkg. 
ECKRICH JUMBO 


ks . », 


‘LARGE EGGS 
oo Fo 


$429 
$yae 





Fre ach tctarsasavertced tame ie 
Tea aA 


at or below the advertised price in 
each A&P Store, except as Sa 
ASSORTED 


cally noted in this ad. 
P oO rk oP sIRLOIN 
Chops” fis. 


© 6 CENTER 
e2 SHCULDER 

‘REG.ORCOUNTRYSTYLE. OR COUNTRY "$4 

FRESH 


ppare oe 





Cap’n John’s .. vas 
Shrimp“ PRECEDAND 


- Turbot GREENLAND 
Fillets = "RozeN 


FILLET 
Red Snapper 


$499 
- $139 
$169 


BOTTOM ROUND OR 


0: Boneless 


ene eT GIFT SPECIALS 


3-.B. [2] 
f-0z any variety [1] 
3 sa-oz. [1] 
16-0z. [1] 
9-oz. [1] 
as-oz. [1] 
29-0z. [1] 
s-oz. [1] 
i voz. [1] 
ANY SIZE OR VARIETY Oi] 


Ann Page Elbow Mac or Spaghetti, 
Kraft Dressings, 
Hawaiian Punch, 

A&P Saltine Crackers, 
Tang, Orange, 

Libby's Grapefruit Juice, 
Pict-Ripe Peaches, 

A&P Cream Cheese, 
A&P Large White Eggs, 
Shake-N-Bake, 


BLADE CUT 


Chuck 
Roast 


SOLD 
AS 
ROAST 
ONLY 


LIMIT 


LIMIT 3 


PLEASE FRYER 


Whole 
Fryers 


BOX 
while 
CHICKEN 


15 ASST. 
PIECES 


4 
wHote LB. 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD Thurs: Feb. 23.1978 _ Page 21 


PRICES EFFECTIVE 
THRU FEB. 25, 1978 


“4'2-GAL. 
ANY SIZE 
ANY SIZE 

100-CT. 


A&P Ice Cream, 

Johnson's Pledge, 

Pine Sol Liquid Disinfectant, 
A&P Aspirin, 

Contac Capsules 
Pepsodent Toothpaste, 
A&P Quick Oats, 

Fresh Celery, 

A&P Rolied Pork Sausage, 
A&P Frankfurters, 


65-02. 
72-02. 
STALK 
16-O2Z. 
ANY SIZE 


Gace PID 
19 


Roast 
LB. 


“ROUNDBONEARM BONE ARM 
$169 


2 Swiss 
% 8 Steak 

$199 
$129 


LARGE END 
MRING | OF 


ROAST" on 


D Steaks <0" 
® 


MUSHROOMS LB. 
: Franks 





Shrimp 3 «28 $169 


Cocktail cis Chuck ceNTen< out 


® Steak STEAKONLY Le 


FRESHLIKE VEGETABLE SALE! 


© CRINKLE CUT CARROTS 14-0Z.¢ GREEN PEAS 14 1/2-0Z. 
e@ CUT GREEN BEANS 13-0Z.¢ WHOLE KERNEL CORN 12-02. 
e FRENCH GREEN BEANS 12-02. 


A&P cote 
; Biscuits 


~ LARGE OR SMALL CURD 


Cottage s 
oS "sat 


SIZE 


u Oz. 
TUBES 


00 


Homo Milk 
7 


GAL, 
JUG 


Vine Ripe 
Tomatoes 


39: 


Chuck ceNtencur 
Roast soastony ve i 








BLUE'BONNET"¥ 


Spread 
rat [| 


TESS 
JANE PARKER 


a Bread 
3 #400 


16 OZ 


® LOAVES 


SEE YOUR LOCAL A&P STORE FOR 
SHOPPING DAY REBATE: 


2 LB. TUBS) 


iD 





When you buy any of these products totaling at least 36 points 
and send in one cash register tape with your parchases circled. 


*MAXIMUM REBATE $3.50 5 














“Sry. rebates on Atcohake Beverages Pout Product, Tobaca, Mik or Oty Produce 
Umit one foto 3350) bar name oF Mastin by March 26, 1978 
Sac Gut DSPLAT FOR COMPLETE DETALA DNO-REGLUIMES CAMRCATS 











SALAD SIZE CRISP:SOLID © “gy 


Head 


3 *40 


Fresh 
Roasters 


3 S00 


S) Roast 
5 
($) Beef Rib SHORT CUT 
n.eccr 1-L8 
megan gee es 


Ball Park HYGRADE ra 
Sliced 


- @ BeefRib 
Bologna $ 1 29 


vs" 49e 
KIMBERLY CLARK PAPER SALE 


—- | KLEENEX 

rene Bathroom 4 9: 
ROLL 

+) Tissue PACK 

Asst. Jumbo Towels THIRSTY 





ASSORTED 
200-CT, 


Kleenex Facial Tissue 55¢ 


A&P Facial Tissue 730K ao 


eRe 


FRANCO AMERICAN 


Spaghetti 


e@SEA SHELLS®ELBOW 


Macaroni 
or Spaghetti 


SPECIAL SAVINGS 


THE 
EACH WEEK ON. 
x Jy FEATURED ITEMS 
HOMEMAKER'S| 5/50¢ 


COLLECTION ANCHOR HOCKING 


THIS WEEKS SPECIAL 
2 BUD VASES 


CN 


A&P FROZEN 


Waffles 
4 8-0z. $ 


BOXES 
DANISH DELITE 


- Cookies 3 : 1" 


8-OZ, 


10-OZ. AVG. PKG. 


NET WGT 





“IN THE BEAN” 


aps : a 


WESTERN GROWN 
Anjou or 
Bosc Pears 


150 


OUR .. 
Tea B ags 


=]09 3 


£9 ffee OF 
BRAZILIAN COFFEES 


3.92 


* 


” yooer. | 
PKG. 


CRISP, TENDER 


Fresh Carrots 
Fresh Red Radishes 


FOR SLAW OR SALAD” 


- Fresh Cole Slaw ~ 


2 saa w. A9c 
| wa: 39¢ 


wi 


‘SEEDLESS 


eet 


_ Grapefruit. 


HITE OR RUBY AED. 





y 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 22 


BETROTHED. Miss Catherine 3. Dyckman and 


William L. 


“Woody” Lovacheff IJr., of Granite City, 


whose engagement is being announced by her parents, 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dyckman of Oak Lawn, Ill. A May 


21 wedding is planned. 


Catherine Dyckman is engaged 


The engagement of Miss 
Catherine J. Dyckman and 
William L. ‘‘Woody” Lovacheff 
Jr., is being announced by their 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William 
(Dena) Lovacheff, 824 
Niedringhaus Ave., and Mr. and 
Mrs. Arthur (Lucille) Dyckman 
of Oak Lawn, Il. 

Both young people are 1977 
graduates of the University of 


Illinois at Urbana. The groom- 
elect also graduated from South 
High School in 1973. 

At the present time the 
engaged couple are working in 
Milwaukee, Wis., where they 
plan to continue their education: 

A May 21 wedding is being 
planned by the betrothed couple 
and their families, 


ENGAGED. Miss Karen Leola Perkins and James 
Leroy Stoll Jr. Their betrothal and plans for a June 2 
wedding are being announced by the bride-clect’s 
parents, the Rev. and Mrs. E. Leo Perkins of Henderson, 
Ky., formerly of Granite City. 


Karen Perkins 
bride-to-be 


The engagement of Karen 
Leola Perkins and James Leroy 
Stoll Jr., son of Mrs. Darlene 
Stoll of Washington, Ind., and 
James L. Stoll Sr., of Haub- 
stadt, Ind., is being announced 
by her parents, the Rev. and 
Mrs. E. Leo Perkins, formerly 
of Granite City and Wood River 
and now of 1234 Clay St. Hen- 
derson, Ky. 

Miss Perkins attended 
Oakland City College in 
Oakland City, Ind., and is now 
employed by the City of Hen- 
derson, finance department. 

The prospective bridegroom 
is a 1977 graduate of Oakland 
City College with an associate 
degree in  Auto-Diesel 
Technology. He is employed by 
Big Rivers Electrical Corp. in 
Sebree, Ky. 

A June 2 wedding will be 
performed by the bride’s father 
at the Henderson General 
Baptist Church of Clay St., 
Henderson, Ky. 


Business Women’s 
dinner Saturday 


A gala champagne dinner- 
dance in observance of Inter- 
national Women’s Year will 
take place Saturday evening at 
the new St. Mary’s Parish Hall, 
10th Street and Alton Avenue, 
Madison. 

Tickets for which -reser- 
vations have been confirmed 
may be picked up at the door, 
Mrs. Ollie’ Derr, BPW 
legislation and dinner chair-.4¢ 
man, reminded club members 
today. 

Those having not confirmed a 
reservation -are being urged to 
call | 876-8448 or 931-2626 this 
evening. 

Based on the theme, 
“Cabaret,’’ the evening will 
open with cocktails at 6:30, 
dinner at 7 o'clock and a floor 
show at 8. 

The Starlighters will provide 
music for daneing, beginning at 
.9 pm. 
> Jim Whaley will serve 2 
master-of-ceremonies for 
show segment, Tanning 
Melanie Asadorian,. Jim Stack, 
Betty Roberson and the “Kit 
Kat” > girls, Margaret Scott, 
Ollie Derr, Judy McCann, and 
Louise Lewis. Valerie Stevens 
will be accompanist. 

v 


Social evening 
for past matrons 


Mrs. Ailene George and Mrs 
Helen Merz entertained the 
Past Matrons Club of New Hope 
Chapter 432, Order of Eastern 
Star, for, a social evening 
Tuesday at Petri’s Cafe. 

After a short business 
meeting, games were played 
and prizes were awarded’ to 
Mrs. Lou Anderson, Mrs. Bess 
Weiss, Mrs. Gertrude Lowry 
and Mrs. Charlotte Root. 

Also present were Mrs. Donna 
Woodard, Mrs. Thelma Jansen, 
Mrs. Ann Mueller and Mrs. 
Marilyn Whitworth, who will 
serve as hostess in March with 
Mrs. Anderson. 

POSTPONE GONG SHOW 

A “Gong Show” planned by 
the Concerned Citizens for 
Children’s Culture of Venice for 
Saturday evening has been 
postponed and a new date for 
the event will be announced in 
the near future. 


IAAI AA AAAI AAI AACA 


T'N' RUN 
FOOD STORE 


4601 MARYVILLE ROAD . 
PRICES GOOD FROM 2/23 T0 3/1 


FOI III IIA 


ea 


$ DIET RITE 


g$ 709 


PLUS DEPOSIT 


* 


Pack 
16-02. 


MEADOW GOLD 


* 2% MILK 
Gal. $ 1 = 


BORDEN ELSIE 


ICE CREAM 
half $; 7° 


FIO I AI AIH mA 


GC Jr. Service plans Hobo dance for seniors Friday: 


projects and parties 


Plans to host a “‘probie”’ party 
for new members scheduled for 
6:30 p.m. following the March 
board meeting of the Granite 
City Junior Service Club, were 
announced at the monthly 
membership session, Monday 
night. 

The group gathered at the 
Nameoki United Presbyterian 
Church for the meeting hosted 
by Joan Wachter and Rgse Ann 
Bates. 

President Mrs. Pam’ Reed 
appointed Carolyn Thornburg 
and Faith Holsinger to serve as 
co-chairmen of the party. 

She also announced Joella 
Harris and Zoe Mance will be in 
charge of a bake sale to take 
place after the monthly session 
in March. Mrs. Harris will 
serve as auctioneer for the 
home baked items: 

Named to serve as chairmen 
of the Easter project were Flora 
Mae Lensing and . Donna 
Polavich. 

Federation President Mrs. 
Beverly King presented an 
invitation from the Madison Jr. 
Service Club, to attend the 
officer installation on April 22 at 
Charlie’s Restaurant. 

The president said eye 
examinations and eye glasses 
have been provided for three 
area school children. 

Tentative plans for a spring 
garage sale were discussed by 
the chairman, Mrs. Mance. 

Mrs. Reed introduced a guest 
Sarah Repp, and a new 
probationary member, Mrs. 
Evelyn Harris. 

The homemade article was 


Salon 53 aids 
youth groups 


Madison County Salon 53, 
Eight and Forty, met during the 
weekend at the American 
Legion Hall in Venice, and 
completed arrangements to 
send contributions to the Nurses 
Scholarship Fund and to Wylers 
Children’s Hospital and the 
Gateway Chapter for Cystic 
Fibrosis. 

Chapeau Mary Massman 
conducted the meeting, which 
was attended by 18 members. 

They discussed the Spring 
Pauvoir scheduled for April 1-2 
at the Holiday Inn in Collins- 
ville, with Madison County 
Salon serving as hostesses. 

Plans were also made to 
entertain the Department 
Chapeau in May at a luau. 

Refreshments were served by 
Norma Hillmer, Frances 
Cowley and Kathryn Fellers to 
members from Alton, 
Alhambra, Edwardsville, 
Highland, Milstadt, Venice, 
Madison and Granite City. 

Games were played after the 
meeting and prizes awarded to 
the winners. 


St. Louis pastor 
at Gospel Mission 


The Rev. Charles Wilson, 
superintendent of the Sunshine 
Mission in St. Louis, will be 
guest minister tonight at 7 
o'clock services at The Gospel 
Mission, 2014 E. 20th St. 

Mrs. Bethel Davis, 
superintendent of the Granite 
City mission, has invited the 
public to attend all services at 
the church. Ample parking may 
be found at the rear of the 
building, she said. 

‘On Sunday evening at 7, the 
Rev. John Pithers of First 
Assembly of God Church will be 
the speaker. Church school 
classes start at 9 a.m. Sunday. 


BUDWEISER _ 

6 PACK $1.89 
Miller Beer 

6... 21: 

Olympia Beer 


49 
ake y 


“PABST 
VD vacs® 2°Bare 
FALSTAFF 

12 rou. ®25? 

ito WINE 


LAMBRUSCO 
IFTH 


ick tock ait kad tel icici ici 


made by Mrs. Polavich and was 
won by Mrs. Betty Nighohosian. 
Others present were Jannie 
Staats, Sue Riess, Wilma 
Eddington and Janet Warren. 


Senior wesidents in Granite 
City Tow. ship are invited to 
“dress ug’ and attend a hobo 
dance and sack supper at 5 p.m. 


place at ‘he new Granite City 
if; Building, 2060 


Reg). *1.19 Johnson Frozen 


Delmar Ave., according to 
Township Supervisor Nelson 
Hagnauer. 

All senior citizens par- 
ticipating are being asked to 
bring along a sack meal. 
Wearing a hobo-style costume is 
optional, Hagnauer said. 


PLE 


1 LIMIT, More oa 88° 


FOLGER 


3 


$ 


KRAFT 


Miraci 


1 LIMIT 
more $1.25 


“Whip 


Reg. 79° Betty Crocker 


2 Limit 


CAKE 
MIX ccc 


ANGEL 
FOOD 


CRISCO OIL 
99 


Reg. $2.25 $ 
48-or. 


59° 


30c PIL(;SBURY 


Cake Mix 


Reg. $1.09 
White or 
Strawberry 


19° 


: 88° 


Twin 
Paik 





CAKE MIX 


69s 


Duncah 
Hines 


BROWNIE MIX 
Family Size 1 29 





PEANUT BUTTER 


Duncan Eines 
CAKE MIX 


89° 


Duncan Hines 
Moist & Ehsy 


KRAFT SINGLES 
AMERICAN: 


THANK YOu BRAND 


Thank: 


|PUDDINGS 


CHOCOLATE e VANILLA 


CHOCOLATE 


Ba e * FUDGE 


Bet. 


FROZEN 
FRENCH 


FRIES... 22g 


R.C. COLA 


Diet Rite of Sugat Free 


@ RICE 


APIOCA 


CHOICE 


ra 


Ib. 


White Ylow Bunny Fo 


.2:59° 


then settled. back in the 
auditorium for an afternoon of 
eritertainment, provided by 
themselves. 
Highlighting the occasion was 

-the seniors’ version of 
popular “Gong Show.” At least 
14 ‘contestants performed for 
the enthusiastic audience and 
were given the ‘‘gong.”” 


Music for dancing will be 
furnished by the Senior Citizens 
Kitchen Band, together with 
other musicians expected to be 
pasa $ 

More than 140 seniors were 
served dinner at noon Wed- 
nesday at the township building, 


Large 
26-0z. 
Size 


29 


KOZYAK’S 


2600 NAMEOK! ROAD 


9 'til 8 MON. 


- THURS. — 8 ’til 8 FRI. — 8 til 5:30 SAT. 


KOZYAK'S 
GRADE 
HOMOGENIZED 


EASY MONDAY 
Fabric Softener 


- 88S 


Half $ 


oe Qua 


SOFT & PRETTY - 
BATH TISSUE 
Roll 


4-795 





2 


GALA 
PAPER TOWELS 


79° 


Roll 
Pkg. 


Zz 
Pkg. 


2 


r == mCOUPON aan 


Folger’s Instant 


COFFEE 


10-02. Jar $ 4° 


LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY 
‘COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 25, 1978 


am aKOZYAK’S wom 


CAPT'N CRUNCH 
CEREAL 


Reg. 93c 
12-0z. Box 


Save 70° - Family Size 


TIDE 


10-LB. - 11-OZ. BOX 


REG. *4.89 VALUE 
1 LIMIT... More *4.39 


419 


FRITOS 
CORN 


‘CHIPS... 


for | 


ESR 


SAVE 22° - PRAIRIE FARMS 


CHOCOLATE MILK 


Ree 


eee 


= 


LIU | gs | Reg. 57° 
Quart 


3 Limit 
More 39¢ 


a 


BOSTON BONNIE GLAZED 


DONUTS ..... 


Viasic Polski 
Pickles... :... 


83° 





Mrs. Stevens hosts Circle Two meeting 


Circle Two of the First United 
Presbyterian Church were 
entertained at a breakfast 
meeting Tuesday in the home of 


Mrs. Peg Stevens. Co-hostess, 


was Mrs. Irene Pearson. 
Chairman Mrs. Burdine 
Holtzscher opened the meeting 
followed by the Fellowship of 
the Least Coin service led by 


Mrs. Lois Daniels. 

The hostess presented the 
devotional lesson and the 
Missionary Yearbook of Prayer 
was given by Mrs. Eithel 
Beeler. 

Others attending were Mrs. 
Bernadine Cooley, Nan Hen- 
derson, Irene Haug, Hazel 
Pellett, Fannie Scheindel, and 


Brownie Troop tours hospital 


Brownie Troop 756 from St. 
Margaret Mary School was 
taken on a tour of St. Elizabeth 
Hospital Tuesday afternoon. 
The girls were conducted 
through various h6spital 
departments and the function of 
each were explained, followed 
with refreshments being ser- 

ved. 


Brownies attending were 
Crissy Brimberry, Missy 
Baggette, Gina Mangiaracino, 
Monique DuBay, Jamie 
Bucatch, Emily Beutel, Christy 
York, Shelly Saltich, Michelle 
Miller, Hope Cox, Juli Scannell, 
Trisha Costello, Renee 
Roderick, Samantha Clark, 
Wendy Knollman, ° Tammy 


Helen Steele. 


CHUCK ( ROAST 


U.S. CHOICE 
1ST CUTS 


Ib. 


U.S. Choice Center Cut 


CHUCK 
ROAST.... 


POT 
ROAST.... 


YOUR BEST MEAT BUYF 
CHOICE CHOPPED 


SIRLOIN 


tb. °1.49 


rs 


t ‘Chain Priced.. 
ine 
e Broil 


oFr 
e Gril : 


TENDER, SKINLESS 
YEARLING 


LIVER . 


}EXTRA LEAN, CUBED 


PORK 
CUTLETS. . 


FREEZER OWNERS!! 


Shop Kozyak's for Choice Aged 
Beef for Your FREEZERS!! 
No Charge for Special Aging, 
Cutting, Wrapping and 
Quick Freezing, 
We Are Proud to Show 
You This Choice Beef 
In Our Freezers. 


\ # 
Miller, an@ leaders Judy 
Buegtch, Gétri Clark, Donna 
York, Pat Knéliman, and guests 
Jason Bucstch, and Amy 
Knollman. 


UNDERCOATING— 
RALPH'S TEXACO 
22ND & MADISON AVE. 


Ib. 
U.S. Choice— Reg. $1.39 ARM CUT 


_ $4 99 


Ib. 


1 TEAST 


FRESH CHANNEL 


CATFISH 


ely 


HOMADE BULK STYLE 


‘Pork 
Sausage. . 


: Hamburger Patties 
5 a. Ҥ 549 


Shanks Ib. 


SAVE 50c A POUND 
TINY LINK PORK 


SAUSAGE ° 


rem TOMATOES 


3-Lbs. or More 
Family Pack 


ISS THAN 3-Las, 
TOMATOES 


MIX OR MATCH 
one CARROTS, CUCUMBERS, 


Cauliflower 


LARGE SNOW WHITE HEAD: 


j 


ANN ROBERSON 
Two awarded 


“St. Elizabeth 


scholarships 


Rhonda Hilker and Ann 
Roberson have been awarded 
scholarships of $100 per year for 
four years at St. Elizabeth 
Academy. Each year 
scholarships are awarded to 
some students on the basis of 
the high school placement test 
results and academic records in 
sixth to eighth grades, 

These scholarships are 
renewable each semester on 
condition that the student 


makes a B average in each: 


subject. 

The Alumnae Scholarship 
was awarded to Rhonda Hilker. 
This scholarship is based on the 
girl scoring the highest grade on 
the entrance exam combined 
with the academic records of 
sixth, seventh and eighth 
grades, whose mother attended 
St. Elizabeth Academy. 

Both girls attend St. Elizabeth 
School in Granite City. St. 
Elizabeth Academy is a private 
girls’ school located at 3401 
Arsenal, St. Louis. 


LIVE BROADCAST OF 
HOROWITZ CONCERT 

SWIE-FM (88.7), the radio 
station on the campus of SIUE, 
will broadcast live coverage of 
the White House performance of 
pianist Viadmir Horowitz on 
Sunday, Feb. 26, at3 p.m. In one 
of his rare public appearances, 
Horowitz will perform for 
President Jimmy Carter and 
250 guests distinguished for 
their contributions to the arts. 

The White House concert, 
marks the 50th anniversary of 
his American debut. “I am 
proud and pleased,” he said, “to 
have been invited to the White 
House on this occasion of my 
golden jubilee." The hour-long 
program, introduced by 
President Carter, will include 
works by Chopin, Mozart and 
Schumann. 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb, 23, 1978 


Page 23 


ENGAGED. Miss Carla F. Lupardus and her fiance, 


Douglas D. Finley of Black Forest, 


Colo. Their 


engagement is being announced by her parents, Mr, and 
Mrs. Charles R. Lupardus, 2515 Morrison Road. A spring 


wedding is planned. 


(Hollywood-Andrews Studio) 


Finley-Lupardus betrothal 


The engagement of Miss 
Carla F. Lupardus, 11550 S. 
Howells Road, Black Forest, 
Colo., and Douglas D. Finley, 
Black Forest, is being an- 
nounced by the bride-elect’s 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles 
R. Lupardus, 2515 Morrison 
Road. 

Parents of the prospective 
groom, Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. 
Finley, reside at 6235 Old Ranch 
Road, Black Forest. He 
graduated from the Air 


Academy Senior High School in 
Colorado Springs, .Colo., and 
also attended El Paso Com- 
munity College. He is employed 
as a government contractor. 

Miss Lupardus is a Granite 
City High School North 
graduate and also graduated 
from Belleville Area College. 
She is working with HUD 
Disaster Field team through the 
federal government. 

The engaged couple are 
finalizing plans for a spring 
wedding. 


Blue and gold banquet 
of Cub Scout Pack 103 


The annual blue and gold 
banquet for St. Margaret 
Mary's Cub Scout Pack 103 was 
held Sunday evening at the 
school cafeteria, followed by an 
awards presentation by Cub- 
master Clifford Edwards. 

Den One led the flag 
ceremony assisted by Mrs. 
Mary Edwards, den leader. 

The dinner tables were 
decorated with blue and gold 
streamers and name tags, 
which were made by each scout 
for his family. An Indian head 
football centered the guest 
table. Mrs. Dee Loyet served as 
banquet chairman. 

Special guests for the evening 
were Mr. and Mrs. Ron 
Luebben, Mr. and Mrs. George 
Reeves, Charles Buford, Sister 
Marie Monica, Sister Marilyn 
Therese, Sister Charlotte and 
Miss McKay. 

The cubmaster conducted the 
meeting and introduced Larry 
Beyer, assistant cubmaster and 
Jim Strack scout coordinator. 

To open the ceremony Buford 
presented the charter to Strack 
and trophies for the pinewood 
derby were given to Jim Strack 
who won first place and to 
David Aerne, second and Jeff 
Fedora, third. 

Others who participated in 
the car race who received 
ribbons were members of Den 


. 23, at Mitchell United 


ate, ere Seneca 


and Mrs, John Charles 
Pancha Pace its of the 


One, John Aleman, David 
Baggette, Richard Caldwell, 
Billy Cauble, Joey Edwards, 
Danny Miller, Scott Strack and 
Billy Whitehead. 

Also to Den Two, Larry Beyer 
Jr., Jimmy Chomko, Michael 
Loyet, Paul Rhodes, Lee 
Schreiber, Tom Sturdivant, 
Timmy Tegel and Phillip 
Valencia. 

Yellow beads presented 
toward the rank of Wolf went to 
David Aerne, John Aleman, 
Billy Cauble, Joey Edwards, 
Jeff Fedora, Danny Miller, Jim 
Strack, Scott Strack, Billy 
Whitehead, Den One. 

Jim Chomko and Mike Loyet, 
silver arrow on Wolf, Paul 
Rhodes, progress toward rank 
patch, Lee Schreiber, Wolf 
badge, Tom Sturdivant silver 
arrow on Wolf and Bear badge. 

Both dens entertained their 
parents with skits after dinner 
with the assistance of den 
leaders Mrs. Edwards and Mrs. 
Mary Sturdivant of Den Two. 

The cubmaster announced the 
Cub Scout Theme Fair is set for 
Saturday, Feb. 25 from 2 to 4 
p.m. at St. Margaret Mary 
School; the next pack meeting 
is to be March 22 following the 
theme of circus and Den Two is 
to post the colors. Refreshments 
will be served by Den One and a 
committee meeting is planned 
for March 14 with Mrs. Pat 
Aleman, committee chairman 
in charge. 

Parents attending included 
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Baggette, 
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Aleman Jr., 
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Strack, Mr. 
and Mrs. Bill Schreiber, Mr. 
and Mrs. Joe Fedora, Mrs. 
Stella Tegel, Mrs. Marilyn 
Aerne, Mrs. Dorothy Caldwell, 
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cauble, Mr. 
and Mrs. Larry Beyer, Mr. and 
Mrs. Clifford Edwards, Mr. and 
Mrs. Jim Chomko, Mrs. Binnie 
Valencia, Mr, and Mrs. Tom 
Loyet and Mr. and Mrs. Jim 
Sturdivant. 


‘Card club meets. 


at Busch home 


The A to Z Pinochle Club met 
Monday evening in the home of 
Mrs. Sue ‘Busch, 4600 D’Lynn 
Drive, for the “clup monthly 
social gathering. 

A dessert luncheon was 
served by the hostess followed 
by an evening of card games. 
Those holding high scores were 
Mesdames Ilsa Bauer, the 
hostess, Diane Winter, Ruth 
Kinder and Helen Krakowiecki. 

Also present were Mesdames 


-Evelyn Ferro, Clara Winter, 


f 





An all-time record 432 
competors from a total of 213 
schools will battle for individual 
and team honors in the 4st 
annual Illinois High School 
\Association (IHSA) two-class 
Boys State Wrestling Tour- 
nament this weekend at the 
Assembly Hall, Champaign. 

A total of 144 wrestlers from 
69 Class A schools and a total of 
288 wrestlers from 144 Class AA 
schools have qualified for 
competition in their respective 
weight classes. 

Class AA preliminary round 
competition will begin at 10 
a.m, Friday. Preliminary round 
matches in Class A begin after 
the conclusion of Class AA first- 
round matches, at ap- 
proximately 11:36 a.m. 

The championship bouts in 
both classes are slated for 
Saturday night at 7:30, to be 
preceded immediately by the 
grand march of finalists. 

Granite City will be well 
represented at the Assembly 


JAMES HEARD (left) of Madison gets set to go up for a 


Hall. Eight Granite Cityans 
have qualified—six from South 
and two from GCHS North. 

Selected to serve as grand 
marshals for the 1978 finale are 
James Custer of Pekin and 
Robert Hicks of Chicago (Tilden 
Tech). 

Both men are members of the 
Illinois Wrestling Coaches and 
Officials Association (IWCOA) 
Hall of Fame and both 
developed tremendous 
wrestling programs at their 
high schools, an IHSA 
spokesman comments. 

For the first time in the 41- 
year history of the state final 
tournament, the top three 
finishers in each of the 12 weight 
classes from the four Class A 
and eight Class AA sectional 
competitions have earned 
berths in their respective fields 
at the Assembly Hall. 

The increase in wrestlers will 
expand the number of bouts to 
be conducted over the two-day 
format from 420 to 636. 


There will be a total of 12 
wrestlers competing in each 
Class A weight division and a 
total of 24 wrestlers competing 
in each Class AA weight 
division. 

The first-place finisher in 
each weight class: in each of the 
sectionals earns a, bye in the 
first round of competition in the 
state final tournament. 

A total of 393 downstate, 
slburban and non-Chicago 
Public League schools entered 
teams in the 1978 series. 

A total of 250 schools— 
excluding the Public League 
schools—entered the Class AA 
series, while 143 entered the 
Class A series. 

Schools with enrollments of 
*750 or less compete in Class A, 
and schcols with enrollments of 
751 and more compete in Class 


Tickets for each of the four 
sessions of the state final 
tournament will be on sale at 
the ticket booths at the 


ee 


asket as Freeburg’s 


Dan Pruett eyes the ball during last night’s Madison win over the Midgets in the 
Dupo Class A Regional Tournament. 


(Press Record Photo by Pete Hayes) 


starts tomorrow 


1978 ILLINOIS STATE HIGH SCHOOL 


WRESTLING MEET 


First Round Pairings 


Granite City Bouts 4 
105 POUNDS 4 


Rocky Lupardus. Grapite City South (21-6-2) vs. Ken Rhodes. :Proviso East 


(7-1-0) 


Bob Kirgan, Granite City North (32-6-1) vs. winner Decatur Lakeview Rock 


Island Alleman bout 


112 POUNDS 
Khris Whelan, Granite City North (38-0-0) vs. winner Palatine Loves Park 


bout 


119 POUNDS: 

Wally DeShon, Granite City South (26-6-0) vs. Tom Snyders, Ottiwa (29-5-1) 
126 POUNDS 

Barry Forshee, Granite City South (27-4-0) vs. Tiger Morend, Rock Falls 


(24-8-2) 


132 POUNDS 
Dean Perkins, Granite City South (28-4-2) vs. winner Amundsén-Barrington 


138 POUNDS 
Sam Perkins, Granite City South (27-3-2) vs. Marty Watters, Hersey (20-10-0) 


bout 


Assembly Hall prior to the start 
of each session. They are priced 
at $2 each. All seats in the 


building are unreserved. 
Nine men withia total of 128 
years’ experienté have been 


named to work the state final 
tournament as the mat officials. 

They are Robert I. Jones of 
Degatur, Tony A. Licoeci of 
Rock Falls, James Nordin of 
Oak Park, Robert M. Rogers of 
Peoria, Clifford M. Sheets of 
Decatur, Charles L. Smith of 
Homewood, John J. Swalec of 
Libertyville, Roger Tuttle of 
Pontiac and James G. Pappas 
of Chicago. 

Three of the mat officials are 
making their debut at the state 
final tournament. They are 
Licocci, a 16-year veteran of- 
ficial who teaches at Rock 
Falls High School, Pappas, an 
li-year veteran who is 
wrestling coach and director of 
admissions at Chicago State 
University, and Tuttle, a 14- 
year official who is principal of 
Pontiac High School. 

Smith and Swalec are both 
working their fourth state final 
tournament. Smith, a super- 
visor with Illinois Bell 
Telephone Co., worked in 1974- 


75-16. Swalec, vice president for 
academic affairs at the College 
of Lake County, worked in 1971- 
72-77. 


Nordin and Rogers will be 
working their third state final 
tournament. Nordin, worked in 
1975-76. Rogers, dean of 
students, at Peoria (Manual) 
High School, is a nine-year 
veteran official who worked the 
state final in 1976-77. 


Jones. and Sheets will be 
working their second state final. 
Jones, assistant manager of 
McCloud Pest Control, debuted 
last year and is an eight-year 
official. Sheets, a 13-year 
veteran who also debuted last 
winter, ‘is a construction 
superintendent. 


In Class AA, the main con- 
tenders appear to be Ben- 
senville (Fentan) with five 
qualifiers, Chicago (Dunbar) 
with eight, Franklin Park (East 


Trojans smack Midgets, 


By PETE HAYES 
Press-Record Sports Editor 
DUPO When Larry 

Graham and his Madison 
Trojans got. ready for last 
night’s Dupo Class A (750 
enrollment or less) Regionals 
game with Freeburg, they had a 
game plan. It was to run and 
run andrun. They didn’t stick to 
it very long. 

The Trojans withstood a 
severe cold streak on their part 
in the second quarter and went 
on to rip the Midgets 84-57 and 
advance to the championship 
game -tomorrow night against 
the winner of tonight's Dupo- 
Lovejoy (Brooklyn) game. 

“Game plans look good on 
paper,” said Graham. “But 
adjustments win ball games.”” 

The adjustment Graham 
referred to occurred at the start 
of the second half. The Trojans 
had taken a 32-28 lead at half- 
time after leading 18-13 at the 
end of the first quarter. 

But Graham wasn't at all 
pleased with his squad's 
showing in the first half 

“It seemed as if they 
(Madison) thought we had it 
made out there,”’ he said. ‘‘They 
really weren’t up for the game. 
Don’t ask me why, they just 
weren't. Maybe they were 


Press-Record 


looking forward |\to possibly 
facing Lovejoy Ftiday night. 

“But I did a littlé ‘persuading’ 
at halftime and they realized 
they could play better than they 
had in the first half.” 

MADISON did If! all without 
the aid of its “fifgman,” sub- 
stitute guard Ronald Morris, 
who was out of! the lineup 
because of disciplmary actions 
at school. i 

“We have rules the 
school,"” said Graham, “and 
everybody has to abide by 
them. Ron's out for the whole 
tournament series unless 
someone becomes} injured and 
can’t play. Then we could 
substitute him in‘the lineup.” 

But Madison Had -enough 
depth on the bench last night 
that Morris’ absénce wasn’t 
extremely noticealile. Little (5- 


at 


Sports 


Thurs., Feb. 23, 1978 


* 


8) guard Ricky Powers came off 
the bench and filled in ad- 
mirably for Morris. 

“T was pleased with the way 
Ricky played with poise out 
there,”’ said Graham. “He could 
be the second-best passer on the 
team."" 

The Trojans broke out in the 
first quarter as if to serve notice 
they were going to break the 
game wide open. Quick steals 
and Freeburg turnovers quickly 
resulted in a 12-4 Madison lead. 

BUT MADISON appeared to 
be sluggish. They had a hard 
time holding onto the ball 
themselves. Two quick 
Freeburg baskets after 
Madison turnovers resulted in a 
new ball game. 

Kevin Mense made two quick 
buckets for the Midgets and the 
score had quickly become 14-13 


Page 24 


with 1:40 remaining in the first 
quarter. 

But a basket by James Heard 
off an assist from Carlyn 
Jackson made it 16-13 and a 
basket by Anthony King at the 
buzzer gave Madison a three- 
point bulge at the end of the 
stanza. 5 

But then came that second 
period cold streak. Leading 26- 
18 with 3:30 showing on the 
clock, the Trojans hit a frigid 
streak that made the snowy 
weather outside appear balmy 
by comparison. 

And at the same time, 
Freeburg started making some 
of the same shots they had 
earlier been missing. The result 
of all that action? A four-point 
difference at halftime, after 
Madison had been up by as 
many as 10 earlier in the period. 


Leyden) with six, Granite City 
(South) with six, Joliet (West) 
with five, Midlothian (Bremén) 
with five, Qak Lawn (Richards) 
with six (including a trio of 
Kelly brothers) and Sterling 
(High) with seven. 


In Class A, Lawrenceville, 
Mt. Pulaski, Savanna and York- 
ville are the main contenders 
for the. team ‘title. 


Lawrenceville advanced nine 
wrestlers, Mt. Pulaski seven, 
defending champion Savanha 
five and Yorkville seven. 


Defending 98-pound champion 
Bernie Reuttiger of New Lenox 
(Providence) did not compete 
at the sectional level because of 
a broken ankle sustained in a 
physical education class 
mishap and that misfortune 
may have dampened his team's 
chances of contending, although 
Providence ,advanced four 
wrestlers, 


84-57 


At the beginning of the second 
half, the Trojans demonstrated 
the result of some of that 
“persuading”? Graham had 
done at halftime. 

A 10-FOOTER by Kenny 
Stanley, a shot by King from the 
top of the key, a 15-foot jumper 
by Tim Colston from the right 
baseline and two free throws by 
Heard all added up to a 40-28 
lead for Madison at the 5:31 
mark of the period. i 

That lead became 16 at the 
end of the quarter when 
Jackson scored a_five-footer 
after a scramble for the ball 
under the Trojans’ basket with 
30 seconds left. \ 

Madison led by 20 for the first 
time when Colston stole a 
Freeburg pass and scored a 
layup to make it 62-42 with 6:28 
showing on the clock. 

“We simply had the mental 
toughness in the second half 
that it takes towin games," said 
Graham, “I thought we picked 
up better to their changes they 
made.” 

A disheartened Freeburg 
coach Charles Mulkey gave the 
same reasons for his teams’ 
loss. ‘They just made a com 
plete turnabout in the second 
half,” he said. ‘Besides, we 


(Continued on Page 26) 


Devils drop heartbreaker to Lovejoy, 68-66 


By PETE HAYES 
Press-Record Sports Editor 


DUPO— When Illinois High 
School Association (IHSA) 
Executive Secretary Harry 
Fitzhugh ruled Tuesday mor- 
ning that Lovejoy (Brooklyn) 
star basketball player Ron 
Salmond was eligible to play in 
the Class A (750 enrollment or 
less) regional in Dupo, he made 
a decision that left a lasting 
“impression on Venice High's 
basketball Red Devils. 

Salmond was the subject of an 
investigation by the IHSA as to 
whether or not he was eligible 
because he had moved from 
Venice to Brooklyn during the 
school year 

SALMOND made __his 
presence felt. He scored 19 
points, 17 in the second half, 
including a tip-in at the final 


buzzer. 

The tip-in lifted the Wildcats 
to a heart-stopping 68-66 win 
over upset-minded Venice, 
which closed out its season with 
a 5-16 record 

Lovejoy moves on to the 
semifinals tonight. It will face 
Dupo, a 52-50 winner over 
Columbia in the other Tuesday 
night game. 

The Red Devils of . Venice 
controlled the tempo of the 
game from the start until 
midway through the third 
period, when Salmond and his 
teammates changed their 
pattern of play. 


LOVEJOY started going to 
the boards more and started 
working the ball inside to 
Salmond and to Eric Watson, 
who led all scorers with 23 


points. 


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| the third quarter. 


The Devils broke from an 8-8 
tie with 3:59 remaining in the 
first quarter to a 17-13 lead at 
the end of the stanza. 

The key for the Devils’ suc- 
cess against highly-touted 
Lovejoy was Donald Gardner, 
according to Venice coach Ken 
Perkins. 

“I think Donald played a 
superbly-mature game... .es- 
pecially for his age,” s 
Perkins of the sophomore 
sensation. ‘‘I think he learned a 
lot. 

“He made a move on Watson 
(Eric) in the first half that, I 
think, proved to him that he can 
go to the bucket with the best of 
them." 


THE “MOVE” Perkins 
referred to occurred 3:51 
remaining in the first half and 
gave the. Devils a 25-21 lead. 
Gardner faked to his right and 
moved in unmolested under the 
basket and left the 6-3 Watson 
standing in his tracks. 

“Donald's the type of guy 
who'll always give more than 
the guy he’s up against,” said 
Perkins. “If his opponent gives 
100 percent, he’ll give you 105."" 

But it clearly wasn't a one- 
man effort for the Devils. 
Ronald Salmond’s brother, 


Ricky, chipped in 14 of his own 


to match Gardner’s effort. 

I think Ricky played a super 
game,” said Perkins. “He was 
under a bit of pressure, playing 
against his brother and all, but 
he’s a quiet type of, guy who just 
goes out there and does a job for 
you.” 

VENICE took an almost 
commanding’ lead at halftime 
when Terry Arnold drove all th 
way down the floor after a 
Lovejoy basket and scored with 
two seconds left in the half. 

That lead became 10 several 
times in the second half. The 
first time was with 7:02 left in 
Anthony 
Wise, who scored 12 Venice 
points, hit a shot from the top of 
the key which made it 37-27. 

With the score 39-29, Lovejoy 
began making its climb. back 
toward the lead. 

Ron Salmond hit two free 
throws to give Lovejoy 31 
points. Chris Brown made a 15- 
foot. jumper to bring the team 
within six, 39-33. 

He then tipped in a missed 
shot to make it a four-point ball 
game, 39-35. 

BUT VENICE was up > to the 

‘ 


challenge and spurted back’ 
ahead by scoring nine of the 
next 12 points to again take a 10- 
point lead, 48-38. 

With the score 50-40, Lovejoy 
made a comeback that Venice 
wouldn’t be able to put down. 

The Brooklyn athletes crept 
to within five at the end of the 
third quarter, 51-46, and had 
climbed within one with 7:23 
remaining in the game. The 
reason for the sudden turn of 
events was turnovers... Venice 
turnovers. 

Two straight traveling calls 
and a turning-the-ball-over call 
gave Lovejoy all the am- 
munition it needed to spark the 
turnabout. 


“THOSE TURNOVERS 
really killed us,” said Perkins. 
“But it’s hard to fault the 
kids...they played errorless 
ball up until that point and 
afterward. 

Lovejoy took a one-point lead 
with 1:50 remaining when 
Royce Finley hit from the key to 
make the score 63-62. Then Ron 
Salmond laid one in at 1:16 for a 
three-point Wildcat lead. 

Anthony Wise hit a flying 
hook shot with 59. seconds 
remaining to bring the Devils 
within one, 65-64. 

With 36 seconds left, Rick 
Salmond fouled Lovejoy’s 
Watson, who made one attempt 
of the one-and-one free throw 
situation, making the score 66- 
64 


On the rebound of the missed 
free throw, Lovejoy’s Anthony 
Crawford ‘fouled Wise, who 
stepped up to the free throw line 
and cooly netted both free 
throws to tie the score at 66-66 
with 35 seconds remaining. 

After calling time out, 
Lovejoy held the ball for one 
final shot. With seven seconds 
left, the team started trying to 
work the ball inside, but 
couldn't. 

Daryl Jones tried a 10-footer 
from the baseline behind the 
basket, and the ball sailed over 
the basket into Watson’s hands. 

Watson missed a lay-in at- 
tempt, but Ron Salmond was 
there to tip in the rebound a 
split-second before the buzzer 
sounded, ending the 
game...and. the season...for 
Venice. 

“WE'VE COME A LONG 
WAY,” said Perkins afterward. 
“When [started this job early 
this season, I guess I had that 


sort of blind optimism that all 
first-year head cdaches have 
when they start their jobs. 

“I thought we played awfully 
well tonight and especially the 
last two or three weeks of the 
season.” 

Perkins then looktd forward 
to next season, ‘We'll definitely 
be tough next year,” he said of 

his junior-oriented team. “The 
only guy we'll be losing from the 
starting five is Rick Salmond. 

He'll be hard to #eplace, but 
we've got a good. group of 
juniors, a strong junior varsity 
group and a _ gouple of 
sophomores who will be able to 
help.” 

Returning to his expectations 


earlier in the year about the 


just-completed season, Perkins 
said: “I had a good’ feeling 
about this season. 

“T guess we didn't db as many 
things as I thought we would. 
But the guys who stuck it out 
and played so well here 
tonight. ...well, they Heserve all 
the praise in the world. 

“BESIDES, most of those 
great expectations Eihad early 
were before I knew)|that Ron 
Salmond was going to transfer 
to Lovejoy.’ 4 

What a difference 
have made Tuesday ‘hight if he 
hadn’t. 


Wise 

R. Mathis 
Jones 
Arnold 
Gardner 
D. Mathis 
Salmond 


TOTALS 


2 
= 
2 


Wiley 
Salmond 
Crawford 
Watson 
Jones 
Glasper 
Wolford 
TOTALS ...... 27 
FG's—Venice 27/62—43%, 
Lovejoy. 27/71—37% 
FT's—Venice 12/19—63%, 
Lovejoy 14/21—66% 
Rebounds — Venice 27, 
Turnovers — Venice 15, L 


x 
|enwawwno® 


“ANTHONY WISE (22) of Venice goes up with a shot against Lovejoy's Daryl Jones 
in the Red Devils’ hegettgesiigg 69/06 Teateaapon tee t0 the Wildcats in the first round 


of the Dapo Class A regional Tuesday night. 


PN eh Nea 





Granite Cityan tops in chess 
at Westminster College 


Paul Cooke, a Westminster 
College (Fulton, Mo.) senior 
from Granite City, was one 
,0f the top players at the 
Region IX Association of 
College Unions-International 
(ACUI) Recreation Games 
Tournament. Representing 
Westminster College in the 
chess division, Cooke placed 
fourth at, the tournament 
held in Manhattan, Kansas. 

Cooke played five rounds 
"of chess against some of the 
top players in the Midwest 
and was leading until the last 
game. “I choked in the 
clutch and lost to the player 
‘from the University of 
Kansas who eventually won 
the tournament,’' Cooke 
said. 

In order to represent 
Westminster, Cooke 
defeated eight other students 
from the college in a tour- 
nament earlier in the year. 
“I wish the ACIU  tour- 


Park district ‘ 


nament would have been 
offered sooner, It was fun 
and I competed with ‘some 
quality players.”” 

Although he occassionally 
plays Westminster students 
and faculty members, he 
finds most of his epponnets 
off campus through the U.S. . 
Chess Federation's ‘ Postal 
Chess. Similar to pen pals, 
the Federation sends a name 
of the opponent to a player 
and, by corresponding on 
posteard to one ‘another, 
moves are made. 


“I play about 17 or 18 
games a year this way. It 
takes about 30 postcards 
from each player to com- 
plete a game." According to 
Cooke, this method is slow — 
with the 1974 chess finals just 
beginning. 

Cooke is the son of Mr. and 
Mrs. William P. Cooke, 3706 
Ruth Drive. 


hotshot’ 


is slated for this Saturday 


All boys who participated 
in this winter's Granite City 
Park District youth 
basketball program are 
being invited to return to 
Coolidge Junior High School 
gymnasium this Saturday 
morning, Feb. 25, for a 
“hotshot” shooting contest 
sponsored by the Pepsi-Cola 
Company. 

Fifth and sixth graders 
will begin their contest at 
9:30 a.m, and the third and 
fourth grade portion will 
begin at 11 a.m. 

Individual competition will 
be held for third, fourth, fifth® 
and sixth graders, 


The boys will be given one 
minute to dribble the 
basketball from half-court 
into shooting range and to 
complete their shooting. 
Points are accumulated by 
scoring a basket from any of 
five places marked on.the 
floor. 

Shots may be taken in any 
sequence, with bonus points 
given for shots taken from 
all five spots. 

Certificates will be given 
to all participants, with 
trophies and patches being 
presented to the winners and 
runnersup in. each grade 
category. , 


Waldo crashing the boards 


for basketball 


Through Saturday night's 
game with McKendree 
College, Granite City’s Mike 
Waldo was fifth in reboun- 
ding for the SIU Edwards- 
ville basketball Cougars 
and he had only played 349 
minutes; compared to Keil 
Peebles’ 846, Vince Barnett’s 
677, Bennie Lewis’ 813, and 


Cougars 


Jeff Verstrate’s 505. 

Waldo had made 56 of 132 
field goal attempts (42 
percent) and was 23 of 41 
from the free throw line (56 
percent). He had. scored 135 
points for an average of 6.1 
“points per game. 

Waldois a 1975 graduate of 
Granite City High School 
North. 


Schleicher’s record broken 


When Northwest Missouri 
State University’s track 
team was entered in the 
Husker Invitation at the 
University of Nebraska in 
Lincoln last week, it was 
both a sad day and a happy 
day for Granite City's Larry 
Schleicher. 


Schleicher, a graduate of 
Granite City High School 
North, teamed with Keith 
Youngblood, Greg Frost and 
Bob Kelchner to help the 


Bearcats place fourth in the 
distance-medley relay. The 
‘Cats placed in 10 events 
overall on the day. 

However, Youngblood 
broke the NWMSU indoor 
record for the 600-yard run 
with a time of 1:12.7. That 
broke the old record of 1:14.1 

. which was set last year 

. by Schleicher. 

In addition, Schleicher 
was a member of the two- 
mile relay team which 
placed fourth, 


Moeller to speak at meeting 
of St. Louis Illini Club 


Gary Moeller, head 
football coach at the 
University of Illinois, will be 
the features speaker at the 
Thursday, March 9, meeting 
of the St. Louis Ilini Club. 


Recuriting and prospects 
for the 1978 football season 
will be the topic of the 
meeting. 

The meeting will be held at 
Schneithorst’s Restaurant, 
Clayton at Lindbergh. A cash 


bar beginning at 6:30 p.m. 
will be followed by dinner at 
7:30. Cost for the event is $8 
per person. 

All interested alumni and 
friends of the university are 
being encouraged to attend. 

Reservations or additional, 
information can be obtained 
by calling Sheila Woythal at 
(314) 878-3891 or Jan Gill at 
(314) 724-4710 (St. Charles) 
no later than Monday, March 
6. 


Umpiring spots still open 


The Southwestern Illinois 
Association of Umpires held 
a meeting Feb. 12 at which 
they elected officers for the 
coming season. 


The Association elected 
Carl Harrison as president, 
Jim Goodrich as vice 
president and Andy Timkoas 
secretary-treasurer. 

Any baseball officials who 
would like to umpire in the 


association may attend the 
next meeting of the 
association on March 12 at 
the ‘Knights of Columbus 
Hall, 3810 North Illinois Ave., 
in Belleville at 1:30 p.m. 

There are still positions 
remaining for slow-pitch and 
fast-pitch. softball for this 
summer, according to Timko, 

‘Those interested may call 
Harrison at 931-4416 or Timko 
at 876-6995. 


SIUE’S TIM ERVIN 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 25 


The home of bluegrass and-good bourbon 
is also. the home of SIUE wrestler Tim Ervin 


By JERRY DEVANY 

The State of Kentucky, known 
for its bluegrass, Churchill 
Downs and good bourbon, is the 
home of Tim Ervin, a wrestler 
at Southern Illinois University 
at Edwardsville, Ervin hails 
from the community of 
Morganfield, Ky. 

Ervin attended Union County 
High School and compiled an 
impressive 31-0 record in his 
senior year in which he also won 
the Kentucky State Cham- 
pionship at 132 pounds. He had a 
four-year prep record of 110 
victories and only 6 losses. 

“I missed the first couple of 
days of basketball practice 
because I went deer hunting,” 
Ervin recalled, ‘and the 
basketball coach wouldn’t let 
me play, so I took up 
wrestling.” 

Ervin’s father knew the 
wrestling coach because his 
older brother, Gary, now 
wrestling at Central Missouri 
State, was a member of the 


When Tim went out for 
wrestling in the ninth grade, his 
coach, Mike Thomas, told him 
he would be’ a potential state 
champion, After winning the 
state title, Tim said, “Four 
years of hard work finally paid 
off for me.” 

Ervin has continued his 
winning ways at SIUE with a 17- 
9 mark — not. bad fora fresh- 
man. 

He is known as “Lib” by his 
teammates, short for Libby's, 
the well-known vegetable and 
fruit company, because he 
wrestles at 126 pounds and is 
“Jean and mean.” 

Coach Larry Kristoff found 
out about Ervin from a former 
classmate at SIU-Carbondale. 
Dave Mulane spotted Ervin at a 
Tri-State meet. After a phone 
call, Coach Kristoff was on his 


way to Chicago to see Ervin in . 


action. 

Ervin won a couple of his 
matches, then spotted his father 
talking to Coach Kristoff 
“After that, I lost my next two 
matches in a row,” Ervin said, 


“but I still wanted to come down 
and see the School (SIUE)."’ 

When asked about, his first 
inipressions of SIUE, Ervin 
answered: “I was really im- 
pressed at everything here. The 
coach introduced me to a couple 
of other wrestlers, and I decided 
this is where I wanted to stay."’ 
He plans to major in business 
and physical education. 

Among Ervin’s other ac; 
complishments. was a great 
victory over Randy Batten of « 
Tennessee-Chattanooga, a 
three-time NCAA Division IT 
national champion, and also 
winning the AAU Free Style 
State Championship four times 
in Kentucky. 3 

Ervin predicts, ‘We lave the 
best team in Division II, and we 
are going to be national 
champions.” 

The Kentucky Derby, blue 
grass, and great college 
basketball are already 
established traditions in 
Kentucky and soon the name 
Tim Ervin may be added to that 
illustrious list. 





Waldo sparks Cougars as 
SIUE upends UMSL | 


The SIU at Edwardsville 
Cougars won their second game 
in a row last night...and made 
alittle bit of history at the same 
time. 

They defeated the University 
of Missouri-St. Louis for the 
first time ever on the River- 
men’s home floor, 86-85. 

Trailing 48-40 at halftime, the 
Cougars, behind the efforts of 
Bennie Lewis, Keil Peebles and 
Granite Cityan Mike Waldo, 


came from behind to grab the 
lead and take a seven-point lead 
with four minutes left. 

Waldo started for the second 
straight game...games which 
the Cougars have won...and 
scored six points while pulling 
down some critical rebounds 

Included in those points were 
two key free throws with just 
over a minute left which in- 
creased SIUE's lead at the time 
to 76-71. 


Lewis paced the Coiigars with 
24 points whioe Peebls chipped 
in with 14. 

Bill Branz, burly 6:8 Cougar 
sophomore who's beefi having a 
bout with the flu, started for the 
first time in two weeks and 
scored 16 points. i; 

The next game for‘ithe 11-13 
Cougars will be Saturday night 
in Fulton, Mo., when they close 
out their regular s@ason at 
Westminster College. , 


Warriors and Steelers to 
wind up regular seasons 


Both Granite City North and 
South will wind up their regular 
basketball seasons this 


“weekend before beginning Class 


AA (751 enrollment or more) 
next week 

North's Steelers will travel to 
Hillsboro tomorrow night and 
will host Cahokia Saturday 
night at Memorial Gymnasium 
in the season finale. 


The Steelers are in the midst 
of a 13-game losing streak. They 
last won a game on Jan. 3 
against Roxana. Their losing 
streak also began with a loss to 
Althoff. The Crusaders slapped 
North back on Jan. 13. 

The starting time for each 
contest is set for 8 p.m., with a 
junior varsity game preceeding 
the varsity contest at 6:30. 

‘The South Warriors will be on 
the road at Edwardsville 
Saturday night for their final 


regular season game. Starting 
time is 8 p.m. for the varsity 
and 6:30 for the junior varsity. 

The Warriors will try and 
break out a six-game losing 
streak which extends back to 
Feb. 3 with a loss to Belleville 
Althoff. The last time South 
tasted victory was against 
GCHS North on Jan. 28 

Next week, South and North 
will each be entered in 
separate Class AA regional 
South will play in the Collins- 
ville Regional and North will be 
in the Wood River regional. 

South will square off against 
East St. Louis Senior in the 
second game of the four-team 
regional at Collinsville, on Jan. 
28. In the first game, Collins 
ville faces Cahokia. The 
championship will be played on 
March 2. 

North will also play in the 
second game of its regional at 


Lady Cougars rout 
Principia, 80-48 


By KATHY SMALL 

It was the rest of the country 
against Southwestern Illinois 
Monday night as the Southern 
Illinois University at Edward- 
sville women’s basketball team 
romped over Principia College 
at Edwardsville High, 80-48. 
The Cougars are now 12-6 for 
the season. 

‘The Principia College Indiana 
have players from such widely 
divergent sections of the nation 
as California, Kansas, Con- 
necticut and points in between. 
Located at Elsah, Ill., Principia 
is a college established and 
operated by members of the 
Christian Science worldwide 
congregations. 

Nearly all members of the 
SIUE women Cougars of Coach 
Lori Stark are residents of 
Southwestern Illinois, 

Jane O’Laughlin of Edward- 
sville captured game-scoring 
honors as she paced the 
Cougars with 24 points. Her co- 
captain, Kathy. Going of 
Addieville, added 21, mostly on 
towering shots from out on the 
court. 

Kathy Going’s high for the 
season, 29 points, was scored 
against the Huskies of Northern 
Illinois University Saturday at 
Dekalb. 


Girls cage pairings out 


The second annual Illinois 
High School Association (IHSA) 
Girls State Basketball Tour- 
nament series gets under way 
at 39 of the 56 sub-regional sites 
on Monday, 
from 544 
and Chicago non-Pablic ‘League 
schools take aim at winning the 
association's newest crown. 

Pairings for the. ts sub- 


regionals and their correlated 
regional sites were announced 
this week. Winners at each of 
the sub-regionals advance to 
their correlated regional for 


(High pea 
strong challenger for the title, 
debuts in the Rock Falls 


regional Wednesday, March 15, 

and has drawn a first-round bye 

SA pelea sesomcioon 
re} 

will be Aictencdoed. by. Thar. 

sday,, March 9. 

Regionals will be’ conducted 
a March 13, 15 and 16. Regional 
@hampions advance to their 

(Continued on Page 26) 


Against Principia, the SIUE 
attack, featuring almost a 96 
percent passing game, leaped 
out in front of the Indians. The 
Cougars scored 20 points in the 
contest’s first seven minutes of 
play while holding the visitors 
to just four. 

The guards were bringing the 
ball past midcourt and passing 
over the heads of the Principia 
defense to SIUE forwards, who 
had ghosted in back for easy 
shots and baskets. 

The Cougars’ defense was 
stingy throughout, but this 
resulted in some fouls being 
called against them — 28 on 
SIUE to 21 against Principia 

Junior Kim Wheeler of Alton 
had a good night, getting most 
of her 17 points in the first half. 

At 7:40 into the first half, 
SIUE commanded a 25-point 
lead, 35-10. The half score was 
47-21. 

The Cougars seemed to be at 
the right place at the right time 
all night, connecting on: passes, 
pulling down key rebounds and 
adding up the points, With four 
minutes gone in the second half, 
SIUE led by 32 points and kept a 
substantial lead throughout the 
remainder of the game, forcing 
several turnovers and putting 
on a good defensive show. 


SONAR TECHNICIANS 


through comprehensive 
program in electricity, 
electronics & sonar equipment 


Wood River. ‘rhe Steglers will 
play Edwardsville on Jan. 28 
after Wood River and Roxana 
battle it out on Monday in the 
first game of the tourhey. 

The starting time ‘for each 
regional game is 7:30'p.m 

The championship jgame in 
each tourney will be played on 
Friday, March 3. | 


KEIL PEEBELS (right) of 


during last night’s 86-85 Cougars win over UMSL. 


TUE's basketball Cougars holds up with the dribble 





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GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 26 


Brawny Big Red ready for basketball all- star war with GC police, firemen 


By VALERIE EVENDEN 

Press-Record Staff Writer 

The lineups are just about set 
and practice sessions are 
becoming more intense as the 
Granite City Police-Firemen 
All-Star team prepares itself for 
the onslaught of the Big Red All- 
Stars. 

The St. Louis football Car- 
dinals will be here for 
basketball next Tuesday night 
at the Memorial Gymnasium, 
Madison Avenue and Nameoki 
Road. 

The 8 o'clock contest, 
highlighted by pregame and 
halftime activities, will pit the 
professional football players 
against Granite City police and 
fire personnel in basketball to 
benefit the Officer Friendly 
Athletic Fund. 

Tickets, costing $2 for one 
adult or two children 12 years 
old and under, are available at 
the Granite City police 
headquarters, all three fire 
stations in Granite City and the 
Madison County Federal 
Savings and Loan, 3600 
Nameoki Road, co-sponsor of 
the benefit game. Or, tickets 
may be purchased at the gate. 

“With Madison and Venice 
tucked under our belt, we've 
gained a little more con- 
fidence,’’ Officer Friendly 
(Fred Hoffman) said this week, 
referring to warmup contests 
between the Granite Cityans 
and Venice and Madison police- 
firemen teams in the past two 
weeks, 

Granite City won both con- 
tests by narrow margins. 

“But those Big Red players 


JIM HART 
Quarterback 


are rough and they are very 
fast,” Officer Friendly added. 

He vividly recalled the 
thunder of Cardinal feet moving 
swiftly down the court last 
February, not to mention the 
crunching sounds beneath the 
backboards whenever Ron 
Yankowski, Big Red defensive 
end, and linebacker Steve Neils 
caught an unwary opponent 
between them 

Both Yankowski (256 pounds) 
and Neils (218) are expected 
back for next week’s game. 

In the joking spirit of the 
contest, Yankowski voiced 
some personal “‘threats’ at 
Officer Friendly during a 


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Running Back 


father-son banquet Tuesday 
night at St. John United Church 
of Christ. 

Four cheerleaders also are 
“practicing diligently,” Hoff- 
man said. 

Providing morale support to 
the local athletes will be Police 
Lieutenant Al ‘Alberta’ Diak, 
Police Sergeant Glenn 
“Glenda’’ Wright, Fireman Bob 
“Roberta”’ Dawes and 
Patrolman Dave ‘‘Father’’ 
Polivick. 

At least ten and probably 
more of the Big Red All Star 
cagers will play in Tuesday's 
benefit game. 

The football Cardinal 
basketball roster includes 

Quarterback Jim Hart, safety 
Mike Sensibaugh, cornerback 
Roger Wehrli, linebacker Steve 
Neils, defensive end Ron 
Yankowski, running back Terry 
Metcalf and cornerback Lee 
Nelson, all of whom played here 
last year. 

Kicker Jim Bakken, quar- 
terback Steve Pisarkiewicz, 
wide receiver Mel Gray, 
linebacker Tim Kearney, 
running back Steve Jones, 
linebacker Mark Arneson, 
running back Wayne Morris and 
running back Jim Otis also are 
expected 

The Granite City 
features 

Police’ department — 


lineup 


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Doughboy’’ 
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Hayes, “Tiny’’ Tim Lyerla, 
Fred “Freeloader” Hoffman, 
“Long” John Apperson, Dennis 
“Wally Peepers” Chenault, 
Jerry Duncan “Heinz,” Rich 
Schardan, Ken 
* Crawford, Don 
Knight, Dave 
“Flash” Ruebhausen, Ron “Go 
Go” Selph and Steve “T-Bird” 
Willaredt. 

Fire department — Charles 
“Foamer’’ Bernaix, Ken 
“Bandito” Druhe, Ed “Curly” 
Hagnauer, Greg “Hollywood” 
Becker and Ray “Lightning” 
Romine. 

Appearing in the halftime 
spectacular will be widely- 
known magician Harry Monti, 
whose dramatic escape artistry 
will be presented from inside a 
strait-jacket while suspended 
from the roof of the Memorial 
Gymnasium 

Flashing black and silver and 
precision movement will focus 
audience attention back on the 
hardwood, where the national 
award winning Steel City Belles 
and the Flag and Rifle squad 
from North High School will 
perform, also at halftime. 

‘Several surprise features are 
planned as part of the pre-game 
activities, Officer Hoffman said 
this week 


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RON ¥ANKOWSKI 
Defensive End 


LEE NELSON 
Cornerback 


YKAH, YEAH, ALL THE WAY! Who would dare 
lose with this bevy of cheerleaders on the bench at the 
Officer; Friendly benefit basketball game Tuesday, Feb. 
28 at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Gymnasium? Spurring on 
the Griinite City Police-Firemen All Stars against the Big 

‘ 


South falls to Flyers; 
North downs Tigers 


Girls... 


(Contirfued from Page 25) 


x 
correlate} sectionals March 20 
and 22. jj 

Super-gpetionals are set for 
Tuesday,sMarch 28. The second 
annual slate final tournament 
will be}! conducted in the 
Assembly Hall on the campus of 
the Uniiyersity of Illinois, 
Champaifin, the weekend of 
March 3f-April 1. The seven 
super-secjional winners will be 
joined by the Chicago Public 
League caampion. 

Approxamately 10 teams were 
assigned Xo each regional area 

The tof} five rated teams do 
not compite at the sub-regional 
level andiWwill begin tournament 
series Competition at the 
regional /evel. 

The other five teams will 
form: the field for the correlated 
sub-regional. 

Granite City North and 
Madison jwill be playing in the 
East St} Louis sub-regional 
tournamént, while Granite City 
South will automatically be 
placed ih the GCHS North 
regional, {hich will be played in 
the Grahite City Memorial 
Gymnasim at South. 

North's Steelerettes will face 
Roxana ih the second game of 
the sub-regional at ap- 
proximately 8:30 p.m. on 
Monday, /March 6. 

Madisdn will face the winner 
of the Whod River-Dupo game 
at 7:30 pan. Tuesday, March 7 

South’#Warriorettes will face 
East St.!/Louis Assumption in 
the secod game of the North 
regional at 8:30 p.m. Monday, 
March 18. 

Sessio#s at both the sub- 
regionalNand regional levels in 
which there will be two games 
will begin at 7 p.m. Sessions in 
which there will be only one 
game wtil begin at 7:30 p.m. 


Presby#erian, .2 p.m. 
Wayside/Taverns vs. Pete and 
Mary's; 3:15 p.m. 
Granite Gty Steel vs. Sammy's, 
4:30 Pap. 


‘ 


Evening League 
Kentuck#? Fried Chicken vs. 
Midto¥in Pharmacy, 6 p.m. 
Sammy’g Tavern ys. Starwars, 


It's been a good week and a 
bad week for Granite City girls 
basketball depending on 
what side of town you live on 

Monday night, Granite City 
South's Warriorettes lost a 51 
decision to East St. Louis while 
Tuesday night the GCHS North 
Steelerettes improved its 
record to 2-4 with a 67-51 win 
over Edwardsville. 

Outscored by the Flyers 17-2 
in both the first and third 
quarters, the Warriorettes lost 
their fourth game against three 
wins, despite 14 points by Carla 
Knezevich. 


STEVE NEILS 
Linebacker 


Red All Stars of the-St. Louis football Cardinals 
‘Police Sergeant Glenn 


from left to right, 


be, 
“Glenda” 


Wright, Fireman Bob “Roberta” Dawes and Patrolman 


Dave 


“Father” Polivick. Not shown is Police Lt. A! 


“Alberta” Diak. Tickets will be available at the door. 


Tuesday against Edwards- 
ville, North got 30 points out of 
Cheryl Scholfield to pace them 
to the win. 

The two main ingredients in 
the win were a 27-point barrage 
by the Steelerettes in the second 
period and, suprisingly, spread 
out scoring, despite Scholfield’s 
30 points. Nine Lady Steelers 
made it into the scoring column. 

The next action for both North 
and South’s girls’ teams‘will be 
tonight. North travels to 
Belleville East for a 6:30 game 
and South will visit Wood River, 
also at 6230-p.m. 


Cougars to face 
Big 10 foes 


By DAVE CAUSEY 

The Southern _Illinois 
University at Edwardsville 
tennis squad faces a tough 
weekend as it goes up against a 
pair of Big Ten, Conference 
opponents. Friday, the Cougars 
of Coach Kent DeMars will 
travel to Bloomington, Ind., to 
face Indiana University. 

The Indiana Hoosiers feature 
a returning NCAA Division I 
All-American tennis star, Bill 
Rennie. 

The meet, however, may be in 
jeopardy due to the miners’ 
prolonged coal strike. Indiana 
state authorities have ordered 


School Peer 


TODAY, Feb. 23 

Granite City North girls at 

Belleville East, 6:30 p.m. 
Granite City South girls at Wood 

River, 6:30 p.m. 

FRIDAY, Feb. 24 

Granite City North at Hillsboro, 

jv 6:30, varsity 8 p.m. 

SATURDAY, Feb. 25 

Granite City South at Edward- 

sville, jv 6:30, varsity 8 p:m. 
Cahokia at Granite City North, 

iv 6:30, varsity 8 p.m. 


More scoreboard 
on page 4 


the shutdown of all non- 
essential buildings to conserve 
heat. Part of the listing on non- 
essential facilities is IU’s indoor 
tennis courts. 

On Saturday, the Cougars go 
on to Ann Arbor, Mich., to 
tangle with. the University of 
Michigan. The Wolverines have 
one of the best one-two-three 
combinations in top ranked 
collegiate tennis. 

Jeff Etterbeck returns as a 
Division I quarterfinalist. Judd 
Shaufler will play second 
singles. Shaufler and Etterbeck 
also teamed up in doubles for 
Michigan to reach the 
semifinals of the NCAA tour- 
nament at Athens, Ga., last 
spring. 

The Wolverines picked up one 
of the year’s top recruits in Matt 
Horwich. Coach DéMars 
commented, ‘Michigan does 
have a tough top-three singles 
combination, but my top three 
are just as tough.” 

Juan Farrow, No. 1 Cougar 
singles .player, is _ still 
recovering from minor surgery 
but is approaching full  ef- 
fectiveness. Although he could 

legitimately sat out last 
weekend, he still participated, 
enabling the rest of the squad 
members to play at their 


‘regular s] 


spots. 

Farrow’ 's sacrifice paid off as 
the Cougars:.came up with 
victories of 6-3 and 8-1 over 
Kansas U. and Wichita State U. 
“in dual meets on the road. 

“The Cougars, now 5-0 on the 
season, are currently ranked 
first in NCAA Division II. 


NORTH 67, EDWARDSVILLE 51 
North “ 8 27 18 14-67 
Edwardsville. 13,10 12 16-51 


North—Lee Ann Rainwater 2, Carol 
Lewey 2. Leslie Mcintyre 3. Cheryl 
Scholfield 30, Shari Ripka 10, Kim 
Collins 10, Lisa McKee 4, Debbie 
Schneske 4, Dawn Ford 2. FG 29, 
FT. 

Edwardsville—Schaake 25, Smith 8, 
Seybert 2, Jamison 4, Anderson 3, 
Armstrong 8. Settle 1. FG 22, FT 7. 


EAST ST. LOUIS 58, SOUTH 23 
South........ 2,12 2 7-23 
East St. Louis ..17 12 17 12—58 

South—Laura Gabriel 2, Susan Bell 
3, Carla Knezevich 14, Kathy Becherer 
2, Chris Boyd 2. FG 10, FT 13. 


East St. Louis—Ware 20, Hall 12, 
Peoples 2. Whalen 15, Scott 5. Burd 2, 
Allen 2. FG 27, FT 4. 


Trojans 
(Continued from Page 24) 


were getting tired from all that 
running in the first half. We're 
just not used to that type of 
game.” 

Game time tomorrow night 
for the championship game at 
Dupo is set for 7:30. 

MADISON (84) 

; FG FT PF 
Harris 
Williams 
King 
Heard 
Colston 
Jackson 
K. Stanley 
Boyd 
E. Stanley 
Powers 
Collins 
Willis 


TOTALS 


oti wasuiacwe 
lsononsrounon 
lon mmwnocawene 

Sloaennn ew 


FREEBURG, ou 
“Fl 


2 
3 
a 
x 


Pruett 0 
Buss 
Beigkotter 
Dieker 
Jansen 
Mense. 
Stumpf 
TOTALS 
FG's —Madison 34/75~-45%, 
Freeburg 23/63-37% 
FT's—Madison 16/23—70%, 
Freeburg 11/22—50% i 
Rebounds— Madison 38, Freeburg 39 
Turnovers —Madison 17. Freeburg 26 
© SCORE BY QUARTERS. 
Madison 18 14°24" 28-84 
13-15 12. 17-57 


lncH noun 


ss 
3 





Editorial 
page 


9 Post Corporation newspaper 


Member 
Southern illinois Editorial Association 
Ulinois Press Association 
National Newspaper Association 
International Conference of 
Weekly Newspaper Editors 


GENERAL MANAGER 
Paul Halbert 


1815 Delmar Ave., Gronite City, Ill. 62040 
876-2000 


EDITOR 
Wm. F. Winter 


Twenty cents per copy. By mail to Grontte City Rural Route, $19.60 per yeor: firs 
second zones. £21.40 per yeor: third zone. $21.80 per yeor: fourth zone, $22.40 
per yeor: fitth rome, $23.20 per year: sixth zone. $23.60 per yeor: seventh 109. 
524 %0 per yeor, eighth sone, $24.90 per yeor Six months, one hall enawel rate 
Serviceman — 59.80 per year, $4.90 lor & months — 


sn the weld. 


Impact on cities of state-voted programs deserves scrutiny 


Municipal and county officials through- 
out Hlinojs said at 11 hearings last summer 
that the state government either should cut 
back on some of its mandated programs or 
provide more financial help to carry them 
out. Their appeal apparently won't get 
results, although the pace of adding new 
mandates in the future may be slowed. 

A special gubernatorial commission, the 
Commission on State Mandated Programs, 
said in January that more consideration 
should be given to property owners who 
pay local-level taxes. The report asserted 
that “the major source of local revenue, 
the property tax, doesn’t keép pace with 
the increased cost of providing existing 
services, let alone new ones.” 

Yet, it said, the state has continued to 
expand’communities’ required prone 

The commission proposed that the 
General Ass¢mbly determine _ the 
economic impact of each new requirement 
that it adopts; form a permanent group to 
oversee the preparation of such fiscal 
analyses, and to approve them; and create 
advisory committees for all state-ordered 
Programs to curb excessive regulation of 
them. 

Richard Kolhauser, deputy director in 
Governor James Thompson's budget 
office, says, "The governor's hands are tied 


when jt comes to doing anything about the 
costliest of the required services — 
pension and retirement benefits for police, 
firemen and others.” 

Sylvia Dennen, Thompson's chief aide 
for intergovernmental affairs, comments, 
“It would make no difference if the state 
decided to pay more of the cost of 
required local programs. Anything that's 
done by any level of government is still 
paid for by the same source — the 
taxpayer.” 

But Steven Sargent, 
League executive director, responds, “We 
think it makes a big difference for 
taxpayers whether programs are decided 
on at the local level or the state level. 
When the state pays for something, anyone 
who pays income or sales taxes foots the 
bill. That group is vastly larger than the 
group of property owners who shoulder 
most of the burden of paying for locally- 
administered programs.” 

Because the governor made this issue a 
prime topic during bis 1976 campaign — 
and because government is more account- 
able when decision making and funding 
are done at the same level — the topic 
merits full attention at Springfield in 1978 
and ensuing years. The unacceptable 
alternative could be dozens of bankrupt 
cities. 


Illinois concern for well being of entire metropolitan region 


Exchange of views by Radio Station 
KMOX and Donald G. Adams of Granite 
City on the proposed metropolitan airport 
at Columbia-Waterloo: 

KMOX—A few weeks ago, the federal 
government made it officjal. The plan for a 
new St. Louis airport in Illinois has been 
scrapped. 

The Columbia-Waterloo proposal was 
removed from the official list of airways 
projects eligible for federal spending. This 
action should terminate, once and for all, 
the seemingly endless debate over a St. 
Louis airport site. 

It should enable St. Louis to concentrate 
on the expansion projects at Lambert 
Field. However, some spokesmen are 
trying to, breathe new life into the 
Columbia-Waterloo plan. They are urging 
a reversal of the federal government's 
action favoring Lambert. 

We have said it before in broadcast 
editorials. Now we'll say it again: Lambert 
field is the best choice for St. Louis. We do 
not need a new billion-dollar airport 
complex at Columbia-Waterloo. 

Lambert is right for St. Louis because 
the overwhelming majority of local 
residents want the present airport site. 
This public will has been expressed 
repeatedly in public and private surveys. 

Lambert is right for St. Louis because 
present expansion plans for runways and 
taxiways will make it a safe and viable 
airport at least until 1995 and probably 
well into the next century. Lambert is right 
for St. Louis because it is the clear choice 
of airlines sérving our area. 

Lambert is right for St. Louis because 
the trend in commercial aviation is for 
smaller, more energy-efficient planes — 
not the ‘Super giants requiring giant 
runways and massive acreage. 

Lambert is right for St. Louis because 
the newest super airports — Dallas-Fort 
Worth and Kansas City — are not living up 
to economic expectations. They are not 
operating at capacity. We believe Lambert 
is right for St. Louis because it is serving 
our area well today and ca do so for the 
foreseeable future. 

We are not against Columbia-Waterloo 
because we want to impede economic 
growth on the Illinois side of the river. We 


STATEWIDE CANDIDATES check 
Tuesday as State Comptroller Michael J. 


believe a thriving metropolitan east area is 
essential for our entire metropolitan 
region. 

However, we think further talk about 
Columbia-Waterloo only puts an 
unnécessary cloud over expansion plans 
for Lambert. Let’s~let the Columbia- 
Waterloo airport proposal rest in-peace. 

Adams—I appreciate this opportunity to 
Present another viewpoint on the St. Louis 
area's airport needs. 

Both my business and my home are in 
Granite City, Ill. Like a lot of people on 
the Missouri side of the river, I live closer 
to Lambeit Field than to the Columbia- 
Waterloo site. So, Lambert is “convenient” 
for me and my business. 

But I support the Columbia-Waterloo 
airport site. Why? Because the future of 
my business depends on the economic 
health and growth of the entire St. Louis 
region. I am as interested in a healthy 
Missouri economy as I am in a healthy 
Illinois economy. 

We are one area — and we either move 
forward together or we slide backward 
together. 

The fact is that Lambert Field is being 
Strained to the utmost right now. It is a 
tribute to those responsible. for its 
development that Lambert operates 4s 
efficiently as it does in the small space it 
occupies. 

And Lambert's time is running out 
already. Last year, Governor Teasdale told 
one of his town meetings that Senator 
Eagleton has him looking for a new site in 
Missouri. Any Missouri site he finds will be 
so far west that it will certainly sabotage 
the economic future of our St. Louis 
region. 

Fortunately, the Columbia-Waterloo site 
is still available. It is the site already 
selected as the best for the entire region by 
the State of Missouri and the City of St. 
Louis, as well as the State of Ilinois. 

The sad part is that the damage caused 
by today’s airport decision won't be felt by 
those who want to turn us away from 
progress.” The damage will be felt, 
however, by our childten — and our 
children’s children. 

Let's not forfeit their future, and the 
future of our region. 


Saka el 


governor, chats with Jerry Cosentino, a Democratic aspirant for state treasurer. , 


rest Rarord Pacins 


To the Editor: 

The labor unions of our 
country have defined a “scab” 
as one who moves in on workers 
who are on strike and takes 
their job. Once he has done that, 
he becomes a scab for life. 

In 1965, Miles Laboratories" 
(Union Starch & Refining Co. 
plant) was on strike for seven 
months. Many of us suffered 
family hardships due.to loss of 
income, but we stuck with it. 

Then along came Arthur 
‘Theis who crossed our»picket 
line and took our jobs. He 


continued';to work on 24-hour 


Now Theis is running for 
election to:the Madison County 
Board against Lou Whitsell, 
who is oné of our outstanding 
members ¢f the board. 

I urge ery union man and 
woman to ‘xercise the right to 
vote, and volunteer your time 
and servicé to re-elect Whitsell 
to the Couty Board. 

{ JOE BECKER 
Rural Route One, Box 513 

(Arthur Theis replies that the 

above lettet is wrong in that he 


Granite City Press-Rerord Disagree on work at former plant 


PUBLISHED MONDAY AND THURSDAY 
By Granite City Press-Record, Inc. 


was'a net affiliated 
with the labor bargaining 


group. 

(He served successively as 
foreman trainee 1960-61, area 
maintenance foreman 1961-42, 
carpenter shop foreman 1962-63, 
machine shop foreman 1963-67, 
new construction foreman in 
1967,’ special services super- 
visor in 1967-68 and general 
foreman in charge of main- 
tenance services from 1968 to 
1972, after which he left the 
plant when it was sold to Corn 
Sweeteners.) 


Recalls surgeon's kindness, skill 


we the Editor: 

would like to make this 
csunmieo about the issue of 
abortions and Dr. Zevallos of 
Hope Clinic. 

In October 1964, I was four 
months pregnant, I was taken to 
the St. Elizabeths Hospital 
emergency room with an attack 
of sevens: 

Zevallos had never seen 
sn batere but he was kind and 


took me as 3 patient. I had an 
emergeney’ appendectomy. 

There were two other women 
who had; their appendix 
removed I was a patient 
there; both; lost their babies. 

My boy, John, will be 13 in 
February, thanks to wonderful 
Dr. Zevallos, who was so kind to 
me. He is a good doctor, and I 
love him for it 


Hiinois Municip Eftimoff cites timing 


of opponent's meeting 


Vasil Eftimoff of Granite 
City, a Democratic candidate 
for’ regional superintendent of 
schools, charged Wednesday 
that his opponent, the current 


- regional superintendent, Harold 


E. “Gene” Briggs, is using his 
office for political advantage, in 
hosting an ‘informational 
exchange of ideas’’ with school 
board members from 
throughout the county at 
Charlie’s Restaurant here at 7 
tonight. 

Eftimoff noted that Briggs 
has invited members of all 15 
publie school district boards of 
education in Madison County to 
attend the event and share their 
ideas on education. 

Briggs has said presentations 
will be given by three school 
districts on alternative 
education, disruptive behavior 
and unemployment com- 
pensation insurance during the 
meeting, which he contends will 
be a beneficial meeting for all 
school board members. 

A spokesman at Briggs’ offiee 
said today that funding of the 
event won't involve taxpayers’ 
money. 


The priniary election will 
take place March 21. 

Briggs sdid today that the 
dinner gnd meeting are being 
funded by his department's 
institute fun’, which is reserved 
for in-service training 
programs. No tax funds are 
involved, he, said. 

The institute fund is eom- 
prised of registration fees for 
teacher ceFtificates and lef- 
tover funds from GED (General 
Educational Development) fees 
paid to take the GED test. 

“This institute is well within 
my job in offering in-service 
training and was the. result of 
several boat'd members asking 
me to calliia meeting of all 
school boards to discuss mutual 
problems. Many feel it is 9 good 
idea,” Brij paid. 

He said future meetings of 
this type may be financed by the 
participating school districts, 
“which would be a legitimate 
expense for each board." 

He concluded, ‘‘If anyone has 
ever been tight on money, it is 
me. They should know I am not 
wasting money with this in- 
stitute.” 


Council organizes for 
gifted child program 


Eighty-four persons met 
Monday evening at Frohardt 
School to organize a Granite 
City -Council for Gifted 
Chil 


Programs and legislation of 
interest to the parents of gifted 
children were reviewed by 
several speakers and tem- 
porary officers were selected. 
Permanent officials -will be 
chose at a future meeting, it 
was decided. 

Addressing the group were 
State Representative Joe Lucco 
(D-Edwardsville), Ray Grinter, 
director of McKendree College 
Area Service Center at 
Lebanon, Vasil Eftimoff, 
director of pupil-personnel 


Shop robbed 


A robber in his late 20s took an 
undetermined amount of cash’ 
at gunpoint from the register at 
the E&L Quick Shop, 5527 
Maryville Road, about 10:40 
Monday. 

Employees said the young 
man entered, pointed a_blue- 
steel pistol at them and said 
ent ah try anything stupid. | 

will shoot."” 

He ordered the employees to 
the front of the store and told 
them to open the cash register 
and give him the money. He 
stuffed a $20 bill and some $10, 
$5 and $1 bills in his left jacket 


pocket. 

He. then ordered the two 
employees to go to the rear of 
the store and he fled through the 
front door, sheriff's deputies 
wete told. 

Deputies are attempting to 
determine if the youth may be 
the same robber who took about 
$150 from an attendant at an 
Alton-service station about 7:15 
p.m. Tuesday. The descriptions 
appeared to match, in- 
vestigators said. 


Hurt on Nameoki 


*. collided on Namiecki Road at St. 


Clair “Avenue at §:15 pm. 


went to: St. 


services fot the Granite City 
School District, and Myrna 
Musterman, coordinator of the 
gifted program in Granite City 
schools. 

‘Temporary officers named 
were Mrs. Phyllis Ryan, 
chairman; ‘Mrs. Kathy Lane, 
vice chaitman; and Mrs. 
Margie Johnannigmeier, 
secretary. 

A seven-thember committee 
was elected to draft bylaws for 
the new colincil, and a second 
meeting was set for March 27 at 
7 p.m. at Frohardt School. 

Anyone iriterested in this area 
of education is invited to take 
part in the council's activities, 
Mrs. Ryan said. 


New Lovejoy 
Library hours 


Changes in the hours of 
operation at Lovejoy Library at 
Southern Illinois University at 
Edwardsville have been an- 
nounced. Regular hours are 
Sunday, 2-7 p.m.; Monday 
through ‘Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 
Ul p.m.; Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 

nd Saturday, 9 a.m. 


Changes) are as follows: 
Tuesday through Saturday, 
March 1418, 7:30 a.m. to 11 
p.m.; Sunday, March 19, 
closed; Monday through 
Thursday, March 20-23, 8 a.m. 
to 5 p.m.: and Friday through 
Sunday, March 26-26, closed 
Regular hours will resume. 
March 27 when the spring 
quarter begins. 


COLLEGE ‘DEMOCRATS 
TO HEAR CANDIDATES 

The © je Democrats of 
Illinois will meet Friday and 
Saturday at. Illinois State 
University. Registration -and 
committee meetings will begin 
at 7 p.m. Friday, while ac- 
tivities Seturday will be from 
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Most 
events will be in Room 40r of 
‘Stevenson Hall at ISU, Normal- 


Bloomington. 4 
State Detnocratic candidates 
ie between 


Thank God for Dr. Zevallos. 
The Apostle Paul wrote in 
Romans Chapter 3, Verse 10, 
“There is none righteous; no, 
not one.” 

Therefore, I to be found 
examining m: more closely, 
and judging less the things I do 
not understand. 

MRS. DONNA SNYDER 
Route One, Alamo, Tenn. 
Former Granite Cityan 


Events for 
children's 
dental health 


Exhibits, oral hygiene 
demonstrations, poster contest 
award presentations and 
proclamations will launch a 
five-county observance of 
National Children’s Dental 
Health Week Saturday at ‘the 
mall of the ald Mineral Springs 
Hotel in downtown Alton. 

The Madison District Dental 
Society is sponsoring the event, 
and the chairman is Shahrenas 
Ghoneim, assistant professor in 
the department of diagnostic 
specialties of the SIUE School of 
Dental Medicine. 

Activities are scheduled in the 
mall, at 301 East Broadway, 
from 10 a.m. until 3:30 ‘p.m. 
Theme of the event is ‘Smile 
America.” 

A highlight will be presen 
tation gf cash awards to the 
winners of a Children’s Dental 
Health Week . poster contest 
conducted in the seventh, eighth 
and ninth grades of schools in 
Madison, Bond, Jersey, Greene 
and Calhoun counties. The first 
place award is $100 and second 
is $50; four $25 awards will be 
presented 

Exhibits and demonstrations 
will be presented by faculty and 
students from the SIUE School 
of Dental Medicine and students 
at Lewis and Clark Community 
College who are training to be 
dental assistants. 

Prizes will be awarded to 
children who participate in 
demonstrations related to oral 
hygiene and preventive den- 
tistry. 

Special costumes and stage 
sets have been prepared for the 
event by Larry Bogdan of the 
SIUE department of theater 
and dande. 


Icy highway 


causes crash 

Mrs. Chong Hui Evans, 27, 
Dellwood, Mo., was injured 
when her auto went out of 
control off ice on Route 3 north 
of Schaffer Lane in Mitchell and 
struck two parked cars at 8:50 
p.m. Wednesday. 

Madison County sheriff's 
deputies were told the auto of 
Rita Krus, St. Louis, first went 
out of control on the icy 
pavement and came to @ halt in 
the median. 

Thomas Ray, St. Louis, 
stopped his car on the inside 
shoulder to aid Rita Krus, put a 
yellow emergency light in his 
car and turned on his 
emergency flashers. 

Mrs. Evans’ auto then came 
over the icy hill and skidded out 
of control into the two parked 
cars, She was taken by Granite 
City ambulance to St. Elizabeth 
Hospital where 4 possible injury 
to her right kidney was 
diagnosed arid she was tran- 
sferred to Barnes Hospital St. 
Louis. 


More snow falls 


through area 


More snow fell throughout the 
Quad-City area Wednesday 
night and early today, with an 
accumulation of slightly more 
than one inch, according to 
weather records at the Chain of 
Rocks locks, 

Preciptiation for the 94-hour 
period ending at 8 a.m. today 
measured .12 of an_ inch, 
equivalent to 1.2 inches of snow. 

The snowfall varied in dif- 
ferent parts of the region, with 
some sections four as 
much as three inc! ~ 

Temperatures in is the upper 
20s’ prevented g solid freeze, 
however, and most highways 
and streets were clear during 
the traffic rush hour: 

It was the third day of 
measurable snowfall this 
month, with 2.7 inches ft 
Feb. 13 and 1.5 imehes on 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 27 


Jr. Achievement 


GC center 


‘The local Junior Achievement 
Center on Wabash Avenue was 
toured by about 50 area 
business and industria} leaders. 
last ee viewed activities of 

‘The group 
four student companies 


Smith Corporation, Ilinois 
Power Company, First Granite 
City National Bank and [linois 


Bell : 
Hosts were James Eisenbeis, 
Paul H. Kelly, Carl E. Mathias 
and William F. Winter. Guest 
speaker was Miss Beth Eck, 

JA president. - 
Forty-seven adult advisors 
six sponsoring groups 


* procedures, They 


toured 


high-! -sehnol-age 
Ae operating 16 


companies here. 

Each JA firm is formed ee i 
fall and is liquidated in 
spring after ‘students have 

free enterprise 
perform all 
corporate duties = selecting, 
designing, peegueing and 
selling items ra: some 
fudge and tissue 
‘romble lights” ang Sacha 
lon, so far im 1977-78 are 
$9,075, up $2,000 from 4 year 


ago. 

The Granite City center 
serving Quad-City area 
teenagers is operated by Junior 
Achievement of the Mississippi 
Valley. 


agsiat sy 
hievers in 


$4,400 machine for 
police by Rotarians 


Granite City Rotarians. on 
YY approved aes 

of $4,400 to purchase 
psychological stress e uation 
machine for the detective 
division of Granite City police, 

‘The amount, which also will 
provide training for two police 
officers, is from funds that the 
club derived from the last 
Rotary-Optimist Camelot 
auction. 

President Donald Shaffner 
presided and Darryl Slater 
reviewed plans for next 
Tuesday's — Rotary-sponsored 
chili luncheon and supper at the 
Niedringhaus United Methodist 
Church. = 

It was annoynced that 
housing issues will be discussed 


by Rep. Jim MePike, Carl Kittel 
and Madison Mayor Mike Sasyk 
at the mext Rotary prayer 
breakfast. 

William Voss, program 
chairman, introduced Dr. 
Donald Fogarty, SIUE 
professor of management 
selence and director of the 
bachelor of science degree 
program in business ad- 
ministration. 

The guest speaker outlined 
work of the Small Business 
Institute, the Management 
Problem Laboratory and the 
Center for Management Studies 
in conducting research for and 
advising small businesses and 
area organizations and agen- 
cies. 


Discuss treatment plan 


A plan by which the Granite 
City sewage treatment plant 
would provide secondary 
treatment of sewage channeled 
here from the Lansdowne 
treatment plant operated by the 
Metro-East Sanitary District 
was under discussion late this 
morning in a meeting in the 
district dffices at Washington 
Park. 

Wendell Wheadon, executive 
director of the sanitary district, 
said proposed rate schedules.for 
sewer users who would be tied 
into the secondary treatment 
system, were to be presented 
during today’s meeting. 


Mayor Paul Schyler of 
Granite City and other mayors 
and officials eee a villa; es 
served by the 
were attending Smeets 

Wheation has said a tate of 
more than $7 monthly is being 
considered to pay users fees arid 
to build 4 new trunk line from 
the Lansdowne plant to the 
Granite City facility. Venice: 
‘and Madison sewer ysers would 
be included in the plan. They 
now pay $4.25 quarterly for 
Sewer service to the Lansdowne 
plant which provides primary ~ 
treatment only. 


Arrest youth in truck theft 


Robert Cherry, 18, of Collins- 
ville, is being’ held in the 
Madison County jail on g charge 
of truck theft in lieu of $50,000 
bond set by Circyit Judge 
Harold R. Clark. 

A 16-year-old Collinsville Boy, 
also is being held. 

The incident ‘began about 7 
p.m. Monday when a red pickup 
truck Splashed muddy water on 
a Pontoon Beach patrol car that 
was working traffic on Highway 
a 

The youths apparently back 
up, apologized to the police and 
went on. 

Pontoon Beach Chief of Police 
Rosewell Bennett Jr., who was 
also on patrol, knew of the 
splashing incident. 

At about 10:30 p.m., Chief 
Bennett saw a gold pickup truck 


Youth found 
guilty in 
rape-robbery 


Circuit Judge Joseph J. Barr 
announced at 10 a.m. today his 
finding of guilty on charges of 
armed robbery and rape 
against Otis Cartlidge, 19, East 
St. Louis, in connection with a 
home invasion in Madison Oct. 
31, 1977. 

Bart heard testiniony in the 
case yesterday and announeed 
his verdict today. Cartlidge is 
the second man found guilty in 
the case. Robert Bacon, 19, East 
St. Louis, was found guilty by 4 
jury on the same charge one 
week ago. 

The two allegedly were 
among three men who forced 
their way intoa home in the 1600 
block of Second Street in 
Madison ae Oat the early 
morning hours Oc! 
the 


allegedly forced a man to lie.on 
the floor with guns pointed at 
him while the woman was 


raped. 

‘The ition ip both cases 
was presented by Assistant 
Madison County State's 


Al 


with no license plates, followed 
by a red pickup truck near 
Highways 111 and 162. 

chief became suspicious 
and ordered the patrol car to try 
to stop bots tru 

Police pb ‘fo stop the 
red truck but gold one 
eluded them. 

Later, police found the gold 
truck on Walker's Island near 
Horseshoe Lake where it had 
been abandoned. 

Police presently are looking 
for two other youths believed to 
be involved in theft. 

The gold truck was Stolen 
from the home of Dennis Britt, 


police 
about the truck, Britt had not 
known it had been stolen, palice 
said. 


News notes 


Severe roof leak problems 
have developed at SIUE 
buildings during the gradual 
thaw of tee snr’ snowfall. 

a 


Ice is preventing most barge 
travel in the Illinois River in an 
area north of Peoria. 

+++ ° 

Gov. James R. Thompson 

said W ry he will ‘ask the the 
General Assembly for a total of 
$39 million over the next two 
years to provide increased tax 
relief to the elderly and 
disabled. An added 35,000 
persons ¢ould qualify for up to. 
$650 a year in property tax 
waivers. 

+++ 

SIUE will hold a contimying 
education workshop Monday, 
Feb. 27, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in 
the Rendleman Building for 
frien 4nd women who wish to 
explore new directions for 
Career OF personal reasons, 

+++ 1 


THe Federal Energy 
Regulatory Commission 
4 petition Tuesday by Highland, 
Carlyle, Breege, Freeburg, 
Mascoutah, Peru and Princeton 
to make Hlinoig Power 
Ca. guarantee them firm 
es service as long 4% the 
coal strike lasts. 
+++ 
The now ay Raj 
Secual Abuse Care 
opened in cesnber, tas 


Ker, 
weet 
, Madison 
cusiatant date's at- 
torneys cl ee ip 
praising the 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


na 


LEONARD COPELAND who 


MR. AND MRS. 


Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 28 


exchanged wedding vows at Sacred Heart Catholic 
Church. Formerly Miss Deen Mary Loyet, the bride is a 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Loyet, 2938 Indiana 


Ave. 


(Fechwe Photos 


Miss. Deen Mary Loyetand 
Leonard Copeland are wed 


Miss Deen Mary  Loyet 
became the bride of Leonard 
Copeland in an afternoon 
ceremony on Feb. 18 at Sacred 
Heart Roman Catholic Church. 

Tall urns holding 
arrangements of yellow and 
white mums, intermingled with 
greenery, provided the setting 
for the double ring service 
performed at 2 o'clock by 
Father James Neuman 

The bride is a daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Richard Loyet, 2928 
Indiana Ave. Parents of the 
groom, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer 
Copeland, reside on Lebanon 
Road, Collinsville 

Escorted to the altar by her 
father, the former Miss Loyet 

—~e a white org: gown 
designed with an o 
lace yoke centered with a 
medallion motif, long tapered 

sleeves and an A-line skirt 
he skirt was accented with 


into a chapel length train 

She wore a Juliet cap of white 
silk leaves and a fingertip veil, 
created by her mother. 

Her bouquet was composed of 
white orchids and eucalyptus 
leaves, 

Matron of honor was Mrs. 
Marsha Perroni and Miss Linda 
Herzog, a cousin of the bride, 

ved as bridesmaid 

hey chose identical spruce 
green Qiana dresses fashioned 
with Empire bodices, 


tiny * 


shoulder straps and softly 
flowing skirts worn with 
matching short hooded jackets, 
trimmed with beige piping. 

Each attendant carried a 
bouquet of yellow daisies, 
baby’s breath and tiny green 
blossoms. 

The groom was attended by 
Randall Parisan as best man, 
Steve Schreiber the 
groomsmen and ushers in-¢ 
cluded Mike Copeland, a cousin’ 
of the groom, and Bill Brown 

Guests attended a reception 
at the Polish Hall, in Madison, 
during the evening. The 
groom’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. 
Copeland hosted the rehearsal 
dinner at the Round Table 
Restaurant. 

For her daughter’s wedding, 
Mrs. Loyet selected a formal 
length rose Qiana gown and 
wore a, pink glamelia corsage. 
The groom's mother was attired 
in an apple green knit dress and 
she chose a yellow glamelia 
corsage. 

1971 Granite City High 
chool graduate, the bride is 
employed as an accounting 
clerk at the First Union Ban- 
crop, St. Louis, The groom 
graduated from Collinsville 
High School in 1970, and is 
working as a carpenter. 

They will reside in Collinsville 
following a wedding trip to 
Florida and Bermuda. 


Opti-Mrs. elect officers 


The Granite City Opti-Mrs. 
Club elected Mrs. Judy Dailey 
to serve as president of the 
organization for the ensuing 
year, during a meeting Monday 
held at Charlie's Restaurant. 

Other officers elected for the 
1978-79 term include Mrs 
Elvira Thurber, vice-president; 
Mrs. Elsie Henley, secretary 
and Mrs. Pat  Konzen, 
treasurer. Board members are 
Marge O'Neill, Lorain Ranft 
and Ertha Johnson. 

Mrs. Virginia John an- 
nounced the installation dinner 
party will take place on March 9 
at Sunset Hills Country Club at 6 


.™m. 

A guest at the meeting was 
Miss Chery] Smith, who the club 
has sponsored through her 
nurses training at Jewish 
Hospital. She spoke at the 
session and expressed ap- 
preciation for the club 
assistance and announced she 
has accepted a_ position at 
Jewish Hospital. 

Hostesses for the luncheon 
were Mrs. Dorothy McCauley, 
Mrs. Helen Todd, Mrs. Blanch 
Blake and Mrs. Lucia Allen. 

‘The retiring vice-president, 
Mrs: Bobbie Rosch, opened the 
meeting and Mrs. Lydia Nelson 
offered the invocation. 

Mrs. Louise Anderson led the 
Opti-Mrs. creed followed by roll 
call answered by 19 members. 

‘Mrs, Helen Wyman informed 
the club of the death of an 
honorary member and past 


Furnaces 


‘AiR CONDITIONING and HEATING, inc 


876-2626 
28 HOUR SERVICE 


president, Mrs. Helen Meyer 
and a moment of silence w: 
observed in her memory. 

Reports were submitted by 
Mrs. Elsie Henley, . Mrs 
Anderson and Mrs. Georgetta 
Monical. Mrs. Myra Parrish 
reviewed a report of the 
Optimist meeting the previous 
week when the women were 
invited to a Valentine party 

Mrs. Pat Konzen noted the 
scholarship committee is 
seeking names of girls in- 
terested in nurses training and 
will review applications as they 
are received. 

AY silent auction was con- 
ducted followed by several 
games. Prizes were won by 
Gladys Pape, Myra Parrish and 
Mildred Branding. Others 
present were Elsie Branding, 
Tomea Kirchoff and Ruth 
Sternberg. 


Youth Fellowship plans events 


The Youth Fellowship of St. 
John United Church of Christ 
held its bi-monthly meeting this 
week at the church, with seven 
members and one guest,.Pastor 
Jim Mory, attending. 

President Rich Hermes 
presided. Reports were given 
by Acting Secretary Laura 


‘Ladies Coterie 


“donate funds 


The Ladies Coterie met at the 
First United Presbyterian 
Church, last week, and agreed 
to send a donation to the Quad- 
City Church Women ‘United and 
to the Mobile Meals program. 

Twenty-one members were 
present for the méeting con- 
ducted by Mrs. Arline Fox, 
president. Mrs, John Kenner led 
the club-collect and Mrs. Jack 
Cormier gave the pledge.to the 
flag. 

A moment of ‘silent prayer 
was held for two members, Mrs. 
E. Pauly and Mrs. R. E. 
Chapman, who died this year. 

The members agreed with 
Mrs. Alfred Pape, who 
recommended the club extend 
Christmas holiday season to the 
third Thursday in January, as a 
club observance. 

It was announced the 22nd 
District meeting is planned for 
April 5 and will be held at the 
Lewis and Clark Restaurant. 
Also Mrs. Mary Miller will host 
the March 2 meeting. 

Guest speaker was Mrs. 
Ralph Wigger, 22nd District 
vice-president, who gave a talk 
on women's clubs. 

Others attending were 
Mesdames T. C. Aufderheide, 
Emmett Beeler, Clarence 
Boettiger, W. G. Cooley, Marvin 
Eddington, Keith Edwards, 
Ruby Foster, E. J. Griffith, 
Lyndell Hagaman, Floyd 
Henley, Ray Horn, David John, 
C. I. Lewis, Louis Meek, B. S. 
Miller, E. F. Reiske and 
Dawson Wade. 


Nurses meet at 
recreation hall 


The February meeting of St. 
Elizabeth Hospital Nurse 
Alumnae was held this week at 
the Madison Recreation Center 
with Mrs. Alberta Rongey, 
president, presiding, 

During the business segment 
plans were finalized for a pot 
luck dinner and meeting to be 
held Wednesday, March 22, at 
the Recreation Center. 

Reports were made by club 
officers and the cheer com- 
mittee. 

Mrs. Clara Kraus served as 
hostess for the meeting and 
directed games after the 
business discussions. 

Those winning prizes were 
Sister Marce, 
Robert Gerke, Maxine Carson, 
Dorothy Bruce, Josephine 
Czervinski, Albert Rongey and 
Helen Gages. 


Honor farmer, 
teacher for 


conservaiion 


The Madison County Soil and 
Water Conservation District 
during the weekend held its 
annual meeting, at the United 
Church of Christ, Marine. 
Melvin Balsters, Bethalto, was 
honored as ‘‘conservation 
farmer of the year.” 

Stephen Norris, Hamel Grade 
School, was selected as ‘‘con- 
servation teacher of the year.”” 

Reports on conservation 
accomplishments and laws 
were given by Dale Sherrard, 
soil conservation, Jackie 
Bremmer, Southwestern 
Illinois Metropolitan and 
Regional Planning Com- 
mission, and Al Mavis, Illinois 
Department of Agriculture. ‘Jeff 
Daiber reported on a con- 
servation workshop. 

Bob Hardy of KMOX radio 
was the main speaker. Melvin 
Koelz, Highland, James 
Grapperhaus, Troy, and Roger 
Stumpf, Alhambra, were 
elected to the board of direc- 
tors. 


... the most luxurious setting 
for YOUR new home 


Before the SPRING rush. .. choose 
the site to suit YOUR house plans 


NEW 


Pal CL S411 To 3 Acre Estate Sites 
For details, call 656-8880 
Devoloped by 


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Sister Pauline> 


Chappel and Treasurer Debbie 
Buer. 

Discussions were held 
regarding upcoming special 
projects. and programs. The 
Youth Fellowship will hold an 
Easter Egg hunt for all 
members of the Sunday School 
classes during the 9 a.m. 
worship service on Easter. This 
hunt will take place around the 
grounds of the church or inside 
the educational building, bad 
weather deciding. 

The annual Youth Fellowship 
spaghetti supper will be held 
May 6, 1978, from 3:30 until 7:30 
p.m. Tickets will be $3 for adults 
and $1.75 for children under 12. 
This will include all the 
spaghetti patrons can eat and 
entertainment put on by the 
Youth Fellowship. 

Plans are being made for an 
overnight float trip on the 
Current River during June 
Proceeds from the spaghetti 
supper will be used to finance 
this float trip. Also planned for 
June is a trip to Six Flags. 


Secretaries 
present skit 


A one act playlet entitled, “It 

Shouldn't Happen to a Bods,” 
was presented by the senior 
students of the Madison Chapter 
of the Future Secretaries 
Association at a meeting held at 
Madison High School. 

‘The éducational program was 
announced by Lesa Ingram. She 
added,. the performance was in 
conjutiction with a request of 
‘the Tri-City Chapter of National 
Secretaries Association to 
present a skit for the February 
meeting. 

Purpose of the program was 
fo point out the kinds of 
behavior and attitudes a 
prospective secretary ‘should 
not possess if she is assigned to 
the position of assisting a 
company executive, 

Vice-president Truville 
Williams conducted the 
business session and after the 
program membership cards for 
the yeaf were presented to each 
member. 


PERFORMING SENIORS of Madison High School and members of the Madison 
Chapter of the Future Secretaries Association. they presented a one act play at the 
February meeting of the organization held at the school. From left Linda Novosel, Jackie 
Riley, Debra Sherry, Debbie Ellis, Andrea Zezoff, Patty Wilson and Cecilia Sellers 


mith the purchote of ony 
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SEE THE LARGEST DISPLAY OF - 
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IN GRANITE CITY, ILL. 
3801 NAMEOK! RD. 
AT PONTOON 


CROSSROADS PLAZA 
SHOPPING CENTER 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD'™ Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page cd-- 


nos Campbell's «= - ; 
| ei Chicken 'Noodle Soup [= (DOUBLE TOP a. 
: = 


—S, HOURS 
. MON. thru SAT. 
6 .o.:* 1.00 a vont 


WITH COUPON AND $5.00 PURCHASE > i erso'P 


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No. 1 Gaslight Plaza _ 


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Formerly Vivianos. 
Industrial Strength 


Liquid MADISON 
Dran 0 | é 5 12th and Madison Ave. 


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ar 79° 


SAVE i na COUPON 


pianary Jack ¢ Pillsbury Grape : 9° 
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Paramount ‘ser OOS Tomato ( eae R 0 U N D 
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Potato Chips 
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STEAKS 


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SUNS oc sae g ee » 


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Bone-in 
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Roasts 
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NEW! NEWI! 
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SAVE 40c PER BAG CHOCOLATE - VANILLA ; 
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1 
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i 
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‘ ALL GRINDS 
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Lu. 


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2, Coupon expires Sat./Feb. 25, 1978. Coupon expires Sat. cf ‘Coupon expires Sat., Feb. 25, 1978. 

3 


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GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


FRANCHISE OWNER 


ABRAMS 


REALTV! 


eee 
3010 NAMEOK! RD. 
GRANITE CITY, ILL. 


877-1900 


LARGE CORNER LOT — Plus 
~ an immaculate 3 bedroom brick 
and frame ranch type home. 3 
spacious bedrooms, beautifully 
arranged kitchen with oven and 
range, wall to wall carpeting 
thru-out, central air and a 2 car 
attached garage. See L-10. 
5 CHOICE ACRES — Located 
near Vandalia at Ramsey, 
Illinois. Take a look at B-27. 
3 FAMILY APARTMENT 
BUILDING — 'PJus a 4 room 
house on over an acre of ground. 
Near —270. Call about L-12. 
VENIICE — VA approved. 
Beautiful 6 room home, very 
well kept, 3 rooms and bath and 
3 rooms and bath down, car- 
peting and air. Could be 1 or 2 
family. Ask about B-15. 
CHURCH BUILDING — Plus a 
large apartment for extra in- 
come. This building has many 
possibilities for money making 
ventures. See L-2. 
ALUMINUM CLAD — 4° 
bedrooms, large eat-in kitchen, 
carpeting, central air, full 
basement. Close ta schools, 
churches and shopping. Ask 
about L-8, 
“MOBILE HOME — Plus a large 
lot, 2 bedrooms, carpeting, air, 
range and refrigerator. Skirted 
and tied down, fenced back 
yard. See R-5. 


WE BUY HOUSES 
RALPH ABRAMS, Broker 
31-1480 
876-0976 
+ 931-2370 
77-7145 
176-3579 


Betty Bucatch 
Llody Riedle. 
Bob Stanton 
Gene Ishum . 2.6... 
Clyde Sawyer +++ 931-6094 
Joyce Rathmann. . . 931-3920 


YOU'RE 
Number 1 
With 
REALTY 1 


REALTOR® 


Thurs., Feb. 29, 1370 


rage’ou 


Cea. ii 
4741 MARYVILLERD 
931-6200 


DELUXE EXECUTIVE 
HOME: 3 bedroom, brick. 
Fromal dining room, family 
room with fireplace, four. car 
garage. Many Extras, $78,000. 


ARLINGTON HEIGHTS OF- 
FERS LARGE 3 B.R. formal 
dining room, b-i-kitchen with 
dishwasher, fireplace in-F-R, 2 
baths, 2-car garage, sun-deck, 
lake in back of property. Many 
Extras. Asking $68,500. _ 


G.I. NOTHING DOWN: 3-BR. 
frame, central air, nice kitchen, 
2 outside storage sheds and a 
fenced backyard. This one is a 
Must To See! Asking $28,900. 


PERFECT FOR THE 
GROWING FAMILY, 4 BR., 
carpeting, 2 car garage. Nice 
yard. Caol Today For Details! 


NEW LISTING: One-half acre 
jot with nice 3 BR. frame with 
new carpeting, new central air, 
10x14 workshop, good garden 
spot. Fresh country air. Call 
Today! 


NEW LISTING: 3. BR. 
aluminum siding, _ full 
basement, carpeting 
throughout, central air, many 
extras, Call For Details! 


NEW LISTING: North High 
Area. Aluminum siding, central 
air, carpeting, _ finished 
basement, fireplace, brick patio 
& barbecue pit. Low 30's. Don’t 
Miss This One! 


IDEAL MOBILE HOME SITE: 
We have 5% lots 50’x125’ For 
Only $10,700. Call For Details! 


BOB BARTON, Broker 931-6200 
Alex Biason 931-6201 
Roger Bloodworth 452-1066 








“The ‘Key’ For All Your 
Real Estate and 
‘Insurance Needs” 


2721 Madison Ave. 
Call 452-1125 


WELL MAINTAINED 2 
bedroom frame with aluminum 
siding, carpeted, bath and %. 
Combination aluminum storms 
and screens, New hot water 
heater and disposal, Finished 
basement.. Immediate 
possession. 


COMMERCIAL PROPERTY: 
Ideal location. 4,000 sq. ft, all 
one level, covered loading dock. 
1-3 of building fixed inte offices 
and display area. 150’ frontage. 


VERY NEAT and well kept two " 


bedroom cottage. Has new 
furnace and. central air. 
Complete with fenced yard and 
detached garage. Priced to sell. 
$11,500. 


COMMERCIAL; 150’ x 125’ on 
Pontoon Road. Corner lot. 
Presently improved with single 
family residence. Ideal for 
professional offices. 


VACANT LOT: Zoned C-2 for 
many commercial uses. 80 {t. 
frontage on Nameoki Rd. 
Priced to sell quickly. 


PRICED FOR QUICK SALE— 
Frame House, Four Rooms and 
Bath, needs some work, 
Detached Garage - Corner Lot. 


EDGE OF TOWN: Mobile 
home. 4 rooms, full bath, 
paneled walls. Storm windows 
and screens. New Furnace. Gas 
grill and storage shed 


FOR RENT: 3 rooms and bath, 
no basement. Adults Only! 


Multiple 
Listing 


omeatTon Service 


RAY KAEGEL—BROKER 
GEORGE REEVES 


NAMEOKI KD. 
877-7544 — 877-71(77 


ONLY $29,000 AND {| BUILT 
LIKE A BRICK [HOUSE 
SHOULD BE — SOLED! Two 
bedrooms, full bajjement, 
garage, patio, centralj‘air and 
ona corner lot. 


DANDY 4-FAMILY, 3STORY 
BRICK, newly decorated, with 
ifcome potential of {600 per 
month, Near dawntown 
location. $27,000. % 


SPRING is just around the bend 
. .. and THIS IS THE ‘;IME to 
sell that house that has'‘become 
too little or too big. 


CALL US TODAY f a free 
estimate of market valle — we 
have buyers waiting \— and 
we'll help YOU find thé dream 
home that’s right for you NOW! 


Are youa veteran? Com? in and 
let us show you how you can 
become a homeowner fwith no 
money down. 

' 

: 

We are dedicated to 
SERVING YOU BEITER 


Broker... . 
Wm. "Satch” Pa 
Mary Schisier. 
Don Vaughn . 


REALTORS M.L.S: 
A HOUSE-SOLD WORD 


876-1000 


CLOSE TO SHOPPING 
CENTER: Edge of town, 2 or 3 
bedrooms, dining ‘room, 
FIREPLACE & FAMILY 
ROOM, basement, garage and 
MORE for $34,500. 


ANTIQUE LOVERS; Older 3 


bedroom BRICK in mint con- 
dition, full of OUTSTANDING 
FEATURES, rathskellar in 
FINISHED BASEMENT, 
FORMAL dining room, garage 
PLUS host of EXTRAS. Only 
$42,950 and NIEDRINGHAUS 
SCHOOL district! 

VALUE PACKED: 3 bedroom 
BRICK in PONTOON AREA. 
Completely REMODELED plus 
garage, fenced yard and MUST 
to SEE for $35,500. 
LONESOME: 4 bedroom 
BRICK: sitting on corner. 
FAMILY ROOM with huge 
FIREPLACE, 1% baths, 
garage, BASEMENT and 
waiting for YOU!! 

HORSE LOVER: ONE, ACRE 
MINI ranch with 28x44 ft. 
outbuilding. BETTER than 
NEW 3 bedroom home, 2 baths, 
carport PLUS 8 room RENTAL 
bungalow to. HELP make 
payments. $39,500. 
EDWARDSVILLE AREA: 
Spacious 3 bedroom BRICK 
with OPEN STAIRWAY, cir- 
cular wood burning 
FIREPLACE, FAMILY ROOM, 
2\% baths, formal dining room, 2 
car garage. JUST TOO MUCH 
tomention. SEE today, the view 
is beautiful. 

LOADED: 4 or 5 bedroom 
rambling BRICK ranch on 
traffic free street, 2 
FIREPLACES, FINISHED 
BASEMENT, 2 car garage, 3 
baths. COME SEE all this and 
MORE plus CLOSENESS to 
WILSON PARK. 


Marlene Pelek 
Leroy Range 


Leo Pelek - Broker 
THE NAME IN REAL ESTATE 


Leo Pelek Realty 


A HOUSE-SOLD WORD 
2775 Madison Ave. 


876-1000 





LUEDERS AGENCY 


12 Nameoki Village 


Multiple 
* Listing 
Reatror Service 


Since 1925 


REMAINING ACREAGE. a-c 
Pere Marquette Park on R No. 
100, 2 acres and a fraction. 


CHOICE 100 FT. FRONTAGE 
2nd & Madison, store bldg. and 7 
room modern brick dwelling 


“and garages, TERMS. 


THIS SMALL TRACT zoned 
light industry on W. 19th & 
River Road No. 151, utilities are 
in. 


IN THE BOOMING TOWN of 
Grafton is a 12 room brick hotel 
with stores - hotel furniture is 
included in the price. 


EAST GRANITE needs a 
confectionery, large corner lot, 
at 2343 E. 24th, large storeroom 
and apartment, $119,850. 


AT 2218 EDWARDS - brick 
dwelling, needs some repairs - 
full basement, gas heat, a nice 
bonus in store for your efforts 
here. 


CAN YOU BELIEVE $7750 for a 
5 b.r, dwelling, gas heat, 
basement at 2159 Monroe. 


PHONES 

877-0388 — 452-4174 

After 5 P.M. Call 
Mildred Fehling 
or Fred Fossieck 


876-2244 
931-3629 





See ae a oe pee we a a 


REALTOR MEMBERS. 
ARE PLEDGED 

TO ASTRICT.CODE OF 

BUSINESS ETHICS _ 


REALTY 
451-7431 
2124 Pontoon Rd. 


Multiple 
: isting 


REALTOR . 


NEW LISTING - OWN & 
OPERATE a Modern Brick 
Duplex with each unit offering 
central air, 2 nice size 
bedrooms, a good size living 
room and a built-in kitchen, All 
the rooms are carpeted and. the 
$31,500.00 pricing Can't Be 
BEAT!! 


DISTINCTIVE QUIET 
VALLEY has a delightful 3 
bedroom, all carpeted Alum: 
Sided Ranch with central air 
and partially finished 
basement. You will be charmed 
when you see this tasteful home 
for $33,900. 


THE START OF SOMETHING 
BIG! Nicely constructed all 
Brick 4-Plex; Some with 
charming fireplaces, all with 
roomy livability, and time 
saving location at 2209-11 
Cleveland. The Perfect 
Investment for ANYONE!! 


BRAND.NEW RANCH at 152 
Troeckler Lane has 3 restful all 
carpeted bedrooms, com- 
bination dining-kitchen with all 
electric built-ins and a designer 
wall in the living room creates a 
distinctive charm all its own 
Electric heat, central air and 
attached carport ....Priced in 
the Mid §$30’s....Just For 
YOU 


GOOD TASTE - SIMPLICITY & 
PRACTICALITY are found in 
this charming 3 bedroom, all 
carpeted Alum. Sided Ranch at 
1400 Norwood. The spacious 
living room with the roomy eat- 
in kitchen along with the new 
furnace & central air units 
provide the best in comfort, 
while the attached carport with 
storage shelter is offered to you 
at a Low $30's price 


INCREDIBLE SERVICE 
JOHN SOBOL REALTY 
John Sobol, Broker 
Ron Corey, Assoc. Broker 
Jim Honnoll, Assoc, Broker 
Jim Jeffries, Assoc. Broker 
Bill Turpenoff 














Reinhardt 
Agenc Y 


1933 EDISON AVENUE 
GRANITE CITY, ILLINOIS 


[Bg]PHone 877-061 30 


SPACIOUS ROOMS throughout 
in this new 3 bedroom home. 
Many features including 2% 
baths, extra large kitchen with 
built-in oven-range, disposall 
and dishwasher, huge finished 
family room, beautifully car- 
peted, plus bi-g 2 car garage. 
See this at 201 Esquire Drive in 
Arlington Heights. Immediate 
occupancy to qualified buyer. 


BIG FAMILY?? See this new 4 
bedroom home with big kitchen- 
dining area, including built-in 
voen-range, disposall and dish- 
_washer, beautiful living room 
and finished family room with 
fireplace, plus a yery large 2 
car garage, 1% baths for your 


convenience, too. See this at 16 


Arlington | Drive. Quick 
possession to qualified buyer! ! 


LOW PRICED 3 bedroom home 
in a good location. Priced to 
sell. Call ‘now for your ap- 
pointment to see 2528 Grand 
Ave. 


VA “BUYER—NO DOWN 
PAYMENT! 6 room, 3 
bedroom home in East 
Madison. Full price only 
$17,500. Good looking inside and 
out. Call for appointment for 
2027 Skeen Street. 


LOW PRICED 2 bedroom home 
in Venice. New aluminum 
siding. Large rooms. Full price 
only $7900. 514 Third Street. 


Getting Straight to the Point— 
WE NEED HOME LISTINGS! 


PI 
.of the market value “of your 
home. 


“Phone 877-0613 


AFTER HOURS CALL 
Robbe: oe « 452-7377 
Ralph Huelskamp 877-0936 
Bill tees 931-5245 


A. H.Reinhacdt 








Ys 
Hl. 
Royce Realty 


876-5050 


OPEN EVERY-NIGHT 
“TH 8100 


NEW LISTING: © Only: $16,500 
will put you in this'two bedroom 
home, fully carpeted,-garbage 
disposal, new paneling; stove, 
large rooms, garage and 
basement. Will try VA. 

NEW LISTING: If you need 
more room, check out this 
lovely four bedroom home, 
carpeted, paneled walls, huge 
eat-in kitchen, central air, 
breakfast bar, heated garage 
and more for only $35,000. 
CUTE AND COZY COTTAGE, 
with carpeting. Air, dropped 
ceilings, fenced yard and a huge 
175’ lot. Asking $14,900. 
Veterans welcome. 

NEW LISTING: Brand new 
home. Only 5 months old. North 
High area. Three bedrooms, 
carpeting thru-out, central air, 
woodburning fireplace, fenced 
yard and a huge corner lot. 
Priced in the mid $30's. 
LOVELY BRICK SPLIT 
FOYER: Everything you need 
in a home. Full finished 
basement, built-in kitchen, 
dining room, central air, at- 
tached garage, fenced yard and 
more. Call today! iS 

NEW LISTING: Wilson Park 
Lane. Lovely three bedroom 
frame with full basement, 
carpeting, central'air, paneling, 
finished room in basement. 
Asking $26,000. 

NEW LISTING: Three bedroom 
brick. and frame with full 
basement, central air, car- 
peting thru-out, family room 
bar, fenced yard and an ideal 
location. 2 
OLDER AND NICER: Seven 
room, four bedroom home with 
full basement, air, range, 
fenced yard loaded with fruit 
trees. Owners leaving state. 
Priced to sell. 


WE'RE HERE FOR YOU 


1-319-241-2227 
876-5060 


+ 877-4052 
. - 451-1385, 

















| HODGE 
REALTO! AGENCY 
Multiple. REAL ESTATE 
Service | & INSURANCE 
3717 CROSSROADS PLAZA 


OFFICE PHONES 
877-6430 - 452-3314. 


UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY — 
This residential property in 
good Venice location can. be 
purchased fully furnished. New 
carpeting, central air, new 
appliances. Call now for ap- 
pointment. 

HERE IS A TRULY OUT- 
STANDING HOME — A 
beautiful two-story brick with 
nine rooms and two full baths, 
two finished sun porches, wall- 
to-wall carpeting, central air, 
plastered walls, full basement 
with a large finished room. Six 
rooms could be converted to 
individual sleeping rooms. 
Many other fine features. 
Convenient location, close to 
school and shopping area. Don’t 
miss seeing this fine home. Call 
now for appointment. 
THINKING ABOUT 
BUILDING THAT NEW HOME 
OUT IN THE COUNTRY?? OR 
DREAMING ABOUT THAT 
RETIREMENT DAY IN THE 
FUTURE?? Then you should 
check with us. We have lots and 
acreage available. Some with 
lake frontage and only a short 
driye from Granite City. 
“INVESTMENT. PROPER- 
TIES” : 

A “TWO STORY BRICK” with 
a 70x70 room on first floor and 
‘seven rooms on Second floor. All 
tile floors. Has_a large parking 
area. This building has many 
possibilities. Priced right. You 
should SEE THIS ONE. 
VERY ATTRACTIVE, well 
maintained brick duplex. Good 
location. 3, bedrooms in each 
unit.-Call now. Don’t wait. 
COMMERCIAL ACREAGE 
located near 1-270 and U.S. 67. A 
great deal of potential here. 
Suitable for trucking or 27? 


Sales Staff 
Mayetta Reed. 


Charlsie Vunevic 
Nancy Vunovic . 


Alter Hours 
45-7742 
45-4878 
451-4878 


877-3860 








MORRISS 


REALTY CO. 
1907 EDISON AVE. 
SERVING THIS AREA FOR 7XYEARS 


Multiple 
Listing 
REALTOR Servit 


876-4400 


MARYVILLE: 10 actes of 
gentle rolling terrain with 1% 
lake. 5 room, 3 bedroom inodern 
brick ranch sits on a knoH with a 
grand view. Home ftatures 
include full walk-out bagement, 
2-car garage, 1% baths, ‘built-in 
kitchen, w-w carpeting if) living 
room, cove ceilings.’ Ideal 
acreage for developmdnt. By 
appointment, please 

2125 ILLINOIS AVE.: f room 
modern frame with braiid new 
gas forced warm air ftirnace. 
Eat-in size kitchen. (Large 
utility room with washir and 
dryer included. Owner énxious 
to sell! Call 876-4400 for ap- 
pointment. 

HWY. 162: 4 rental unils with 
income of close to $4,400 per 
year. and selling for $20,900. Be 
sure to inquire about this:money 
maker!! i 

205 ACRES: Fronts }ipprox. 
4750’ on East Side of Hw}. 111 at 
Pontoon Beach. Entire fiontage 
for a depth of 350’ is zondd Hwy. 
Business District. / Great 
potential for developme+ht. Call 
for full information!! + 
THINKING OF SELLING?? 
Think about MORRISS 
REALTY CO. Our 75 years of 
service. attests is our 
professional handling ofall your 
real estate needs!! i 
MISSOURI AVE... HVIY. 3: 
Mfg. plant with approx; _ 12,000 
sq. ft. of steel bldg. PLIVS 1200 
sq. ft. of office space: Entire 7% 
acre site is-cyclone fe as 
most is:slagged for heavy; bec . 
TU. Terminal R.R: si 

ton ‘crane. PRICE HAS’ BEEN 
SLASHED!! tdeal location and 
facilities for general onl gchar: 


FFICE, prichies| ~ 
76-4400 451-7480 


SALESMEN HOW! 
art rT 


MORRISS ISS REALTY 3 


1907 Edison Ave. 








Investment 
Realty 


Service 


1414 21st Street 


—CALL— 
877-7507 


WRITE THIS NUMBER DOWN! I 
For Your Complete 
Real Estate Service 


@ RESIDENTIAL @SALES 
© COMMERCIAL 
@ RENTAL 
© FARMS 


Multiple 
Listing 





REALTOR Service 








BEAUTY SHOP — Downtown 
Granite City. Small investment 
returns quickly when you 
manage. Owner retiring. Call 
tonight. 


PRICE REDUCED - 
Steelcrest Manor. 3 bedroom 
Split foyer and. garage. Only 
$2,250 down on’ FHA. Nothing 
down .to veteran. 


SEVERAL DUPLEXES — For 
the first-time-inyestor. Start 
your fortune with ‘one of these 
money makers todiy: 


Bill Lehn, sroker 
Home Phone 876-8794 








Whitt [Reaity 


Multiple Listing Service 
3700 NAMEOK! ROAD 


877-3900 


DID YOU KNOW ! The Action 
Co. has a national referral 
system and many many 
listings, Throughout the U.S.A. 
Let us help make your next 
moye by recommending a 
reputable broker in your new 
location. 

2812 HARDING: to much to 
believe but seeing is believing— 
this 6 room 4 bedroom beauty 
has everything f~ a growing 
family. Feat Oe central 
air, W-W . ‘oY big country 
size lot all fenced in - 2 car 
garage & a place for Mom or 
Dads mobile home too if 
needed. Lets See! 

1 ACRE OR 5 ACRES OR 
MORE. We have it. Handy 
location - Prime land easy 
terms. Can trade too! Let's 
Talk! 


IN TROY— Brand new 3 
bedroom home in pretty 
location. Has full basement 
many extras like 134 baths, 
central air, W-W carpeting ali 
for just $41,900.00. 


3 ROOM COTTAGE with full 
basement perfect beginner 
home. Has aluminum siding- 
storm sash- gas heat - 50’ lot. at 
2902 Madison Ave. 

2 HOMES ON __LARGE. 
COUNTRY 1% ACRES. Good 
commercial spot. Homes in 
excellent cond. % mi. east of 
Hwy. 111 on 162 next to Nameoki 
Township Office. Good income 
investment potential. Perfect 
for business‘or ?? Call now $$ 
‘1615 COURTENAY: Perfect & 
cozy 3 room cottage- attached 
carport. Big patio & fenced in 
yard. Fast Possession» Too! 
$13,900.00. 


MINI -SUPERMARKET: 
Excellent neighborhood trade- 
very good condition. Gross 
approximately $200,000 an- 
mually- includes all fixtures and 
complete buteher shop. May 
trade for nice income property. 
Call for confidential interview! 


James Whitt— Broker 
Cliff Smith — 877-2468 
Edna Miller —876-£049 
Louise Smith — 877-2468 
Steve Suess — 876-2256 
J.C. Cochrane — 














STEELE- 
KUNNEMANN 


call... . 876-0252 


REALTOR 


WILSON PARK AREA: Lovely 
immaculate 7 room, 2 or 3 
bedroom Ranch Home. Built-in 
kitchen, dishwasher, disposal, 
range hood, living room, large 
Den with built-in cabinets and 
desk, large Family room with 
Gas fireplace, 2 beautiful baths, 
w-w carpeting, utility room, 
central air, large 2 car garage 
with automatic door opener, 
large lot plus many other ‘nice 
features. Home is tastefully 
decorated. Call 876-0252 for 
appointment. 

VERY ATTRACTIVE: 2 or 3 
bedroom home in Maryland 
Place on large corner well 
landscaped lot. Large living 
room with wood burning 
fireplace, large family room, 
screened porch, ample closets, 
garbage disposal, __ full 
basement, water well, built-in 
bookshelves, 1 car oversize 
garage, plus other nice 
features, Call 876-0252 today for 
appointment. 

"VERY NEAT WELL KEPT: 2 
bedroom frame home with 
living room, pretty kitchen,’ 
ceramic tile bath, ample 
closets, utility room, alum. 
storms and doors, certified! 
electrie wiring, large carport 
with storage room. Priced to 


sell at only $19,500. 


COMMERCIAL PROPERTY: 
Excellent.. Has 2 offices and 
store front space and 
warehouse or work shop space 
in rear of bldg. Suitable for 
many types of business. 
Spacious 3 room and bath apt. 
upstairs. Gas heat. A terrific 
value at $14,950. Will consider 
contract for deed to qualified 
party. 
COMMERCIAL BLDG. : 2 story 
brick near Downtown. Has 3600 
sq. ft. both up and downstairs. 
PLUS full basement. 2 store: 
spaces and two 5 room apts. 
upstairs that are ideal for' 
professional’ offices © or 
residential use. New gas fired 
boiler. Call for further details. 


Charles Meyer . home musesie! 
Clarence Boettjger; ....876-2556,, 








ieee 





22 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU 
WITH OVER 80 SALESPEOPLE 
AND OVER 400 LISTINGS 





eee 


2848 MADISON AVE. 
GRANITE CITY, ILL. 62040 


“Thinking of Selling? 
Free Estimate of 
Market Value Anytime! 


877-5977 


GLENWOOD ESTATES — 
Planned for important people. 3 
bedroom brick, living room, 
formal dining room, 3 baths, 
family room with fireplace, 
game room, 2 car garage. 
Decorated by BEY.- 

4 FAMILY BRICK — Very 
convenient for shopping, all 4 
units completely remodeled, all 
Separate utilities. 

2 STORY — 3 nice size 
bedrooms, living room, formal 
dining room, family room, full 
. basement, 2 car garage. Only 
$28,500. 

1% STORY — 4 bedrooms, 
living room, dining room, 
kitchen, full basement, 2 full 
baths, 2 car garage. $24,900. 

3 BEDROOMS — Alum. siding, 
living room, kitchen, carpeted 
throughout, fenced yard. 

BE THE FIRST to inspect this 
immaculate 2 bedrooms, living 
room, formal dining room, 
kitchen, full basement, garage. 
All for only $26,900. 


LEXINGTON SUBDIVISIO: 

4 bedrooms, alum. siding, living 
room, kitchen, 1% baths, 
garage, VA or FHA. 

PROFIT BY BUYING NOW — 
Cape Cod, 4 bedrooms,’ living 
room, dining room, kitchen, full 
basement, garage, XXXX 
Lynch. 





2 STORY — 4 bedrooms, living 
room, formal dining room, 
kitchen, finished basement, 2 
car garage. 


MAGNIFICENT COUNTRY 
HOME — On 11-3 acres, extra 
large bedrooms, complete built- 
in kitchen, family room with 
beautiful fireplace. This is what 
you have been waiting for. 


TED VALENCIA—931-2634 
CARL HOFFMAN—931-4331 
FRED KING—1-288-7315 
GEORGE CREWS—877-3403 
JERRY VORHEES—931-2857 


Granite City 
Realty Co. 


Herman Schroeder, broker 
Office (618) 876-2524 


CLOSE TO PARK: 3 bedrooms, 
ing, dining room., built-in 
kitchen, basement, central air. 
Priced for quick sale. Call now. 
6 ROOM, 2 STORY: Main- 
tenance free. Carefree alum. 
siding, 3 bedrooms, living, 
dining room, ‘kitchen, 
basement, central air, park 
location. This is a SLEEPER. 
SEE IT NOW. 
A REAL CREAM PUFF: 4 
bedrooms, story and one-half. A 
mother’s dream.’ Plus extra 
large, heated oversize garage 
and workshop. Large 100x400 ft. 
lot. Loads of fruit trees. Lake in 
rear. 
EDGE OF TOWN: North High 
School. 2 bedrooms, living 
room, family room, big kitchen, 
2 car garage. Large 75x220 ft. 
fenced lot. GHI ins. 
CUTE LITTLE DOLL HOUSE: 
Perfect starter. 2 bedrooms, 
living room, plus sewing room 
or playroom for the kids. Built- 
in dishwasher, basement, 
central air, carport, fenced 
yard. 
PARK AREA: 2 or 3 bedroom 
brick, nothing to do but move in. 
Mint condition. Basement 
finished, garage. Must see now 
WE HAVE THE KEY: Vacant 
Ready to move in. Cute as a 
button, 4 rooms and bath, 
fenced yard. All newly 
remodeled inside and out. 


Thinking of selling? Call 


Granite City Realty. We work | 


harder for you. Most homes 
guaranteed for one year. When 
you buy, ask about GHI Ins. 


Two Offices to 
Serve you better: 
1561 Johnson Rd. 
4700 Nameoki Rd. 
Walter Greathouse 452-6167 
Elaine Prince ~ 451-9191 
Bud Gosnell 
Pat Kalips 
Ron Ely 
Greg Robertson 
Genn Hasheider 
Brenda Phillips 
Joe Craft 


931-5446 
451-2654 
877-1518 
876-1823 











SAM 
WOLF 


REALTY, INC. 
El re Lor] 
yee ett) 


EDGE OF TOWN LOCATION. 
Big beautiful brick with 3 
bedrooms, central air, w-w 
carpet, large country kitchen, 
and garage. $39,900. 


HERE'S WHAT YOU'VE 
BEEN LOOKING FOR. 3 
bedroom home with full 
basement, air, fenced yard, 
_ wood cabinets in the kitchen, All 
on a 70x100-ft. lot. Only $26,750. 


MONEYMAKER. 10 pad trailer 
court, located St. Clair County. 
Call for particulars 


BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM 
HOME. With aluminum siding, 
basement, cent. air, carpeting, 
I car garage, kitchen-dining 
comb., on a quiet street in a 
good neighborhood, only 
$30,500. 


TWO COMMERCIAL LoTs. 
100x100-ft., 45x100-ft., Pontoon 
Beach area 


COMMERCIAL CORNER 
LOCATION. 3 buildings in- 
cluding residence, 80x125-ft. 
corner’ lot, 20x36-ft. storage 
garage, 20x50-ft. commercial 
building, additional small 
building for small shop, call us 
on this one. 


LOT, EXCELLENT POTEN- 
TIAL COMMERCIAL. 100x150- 
ft., on Lincoln Ave., near 
Nameoki, call us 


WE HAVE OTHER, TWO, 
THREE, AND FOUR 
BEDROOM HOMES. In all 
areas of community, all price 
ranges, convenient to shopping 
centers, churches, call us. 


SAM WOLF—877-1366 
HOME 
BOB HARRIS—931-6369_ 


HOME 
MARY WIESEHAN—877-0740 ~ 





i HOME 
KAREN SHESHORN—931-3795 
o “8..-. HOME 








JOHN KREKOVICH 
REALTY 


is es x 
876-2323 ree Ne 2504 
“JUST IN" — Close to the park 
is this 3 bedroom, living room, 
kitchen, utility room, bath, 
central air, carpeted thru-out, 
fenced back yard, and much 
more for only $26,995. 

1800 PRIMROSE — Extra neat 
and clean thru-out, is this 2 
bedroom brick with finished 
basement, large corner lot plus 
1 car garage. Home is tastefully 
decorated! 

“HOME OF THE YEAR" — Is 
this custom built home with 
spacious bedrooms, the finest 
“built-in” kitchen you'll ever 
see, family room with fireplace, 
formal dining room with lake 
view, sunken marble tub in 
bathroom, 2 car garage, fire 
and burglar alarm system, gas 
grill on sundeck. 

“NEW HOME UNDER CON- 
STRUCTION” — 3 bedroom 
brick and frame, family room 
with fireplace, 2 baths, full 
carpeting, built-in kitchen, 2 car 
garage, 100’x150’ lot. Possession 
in 30 days. 

ACROSS FROM CROSSROADS 
PLAZA — 100’x265’ lot with 
structure that can be converted 
into ‘‘Medical Offices’’ on 
Nameoki Road. Very good 
investment — Stop by for more 
info! 

“ A REAL VALUE AT ONLY 
$23,500" — 3 bedroom, living 
room and dining room, kitchen, 
1% baths, full basement, 
detached garage. Home is 
decorated tastefully! 
“INVESTMENT —OPPORTU- 
NITY” — % block from Park is 
this super buy for confectionery 
owner. Priced right at only 
$23,500. 

BUILDING LOT ON LYNCH 
AVE. —All utilities, 73’x135’ lot. 
$10,500. 


“The Real Estaters” 
876-2323 — 876-2324 — 876-2325 


John Krekovich — Broker 

Shirley Heath . - - 877-1834 
Al Wilkinson. .. . . . 1-288-5233 
Barb Johnson +. 931-5511 
Ralph Strain . ~ +» 876-1095 
John Janek Jr. - +. 877-0428 
Mike Strain. ...... . 876-1095 





BINNS OO aN MOLANGS “SUOLTWIY JO GUVOE ALID JLINVY 


DEADLINES 


Noon Friday for Display Classified 
4:30 P.M. Friday for Regutor Classified 
3:30 P.M. For Master Charge Calls 


THURSDAY 


4:30 P.M. Tuesday for Dispiay Classified 
10:00 A.M. Wednesday for Régular Classified 
9 A.M. For Master Charge Calls 
MINIMUM CHARGE $1.25 (BOX NUMBER, SERVICE CHARGE $1.00) 
RATES: | 
FIRST INSERTION...... = 


SECOND INSERTION . +9 Word 
FOURTH INSERTION . - 8 Word 


CANCEL YOUR AD DAY RESUL}S ARE OBTAINED 
. .. REFUNDS ARE BASED ON EARNED RATE... 
Office Open 8 A.M.:4:30 Daily 

Closed Saturdgys 
MASTER CHARGE PHONE NUMBER 877-1343 


Housing Act of 
rimination based 
Such preference 


. 10° Word 


Ail real extate advertised in thit newspaper is rubject th the Féderal F. 
1908 which maker it illegal to advertise “any preference. jmitation or 
‘on mace, color. religion. tex, of national ongin, or an inteftron 10 make 
limitation, oF discrimination 

This newspaper; will not knowingly accept any adversising for real estate which 3 sn 
solation.of the law Our readers are informed thai all welling: advertised in this news 
paper are available onan egual opportunity basit 


Pees AB Gas 1 





nie MADISON AlTy 
GRANITE CITY. ity 
877-6108 877-6109 


* 


329 PLUM COLLINSVILLE: Nice 3 bedrom home w/basement 
garage, new carpeting, cabinets etc.’ Assume “loan! First 
offering, 


IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY: 3 bedrogm home, completely 
remodeled inside.-New carpeting, new kitchen, bath etc.! $2,250 
down and $205 month complete! 


2910 ROOSEVELT: Nice home. All renjodeled inside. Can be 
yours for $1,100 down and $100 complete i¥/taxes and insurance 
—has 3 bedrooms and buyer moving out éf town! 
x x FOR + 
REAL REAL ESTATE RESULTS 
CALL THE HOUSE OF REAL ESTATE 
877-6108 — 451-7946 
WE WILL SELL YOUR HOME TODAY 
APARTMENT & DUPLEXES: Real moneymakers for the right 


person. All brick. Low maintenance & nice income. Call about 
these today. % 


2532 REVERE: All aluminum 3 bedroom }v/garage, fenced rear 
ard. Neat as a pin. $2,900 down an@ $270 mo complete. 
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! 


FARMS: We have several nice farms within 70 miles radius! 
Call for particulars and directions today! 


4 BEDROOM HOME APT.: All for only $18,900. Ideal for large 
family who wants extra income! ; 


1651 SPRUCE: Real neat 2 bedroom hime w/basement and 
carport. Real cozy inside. Yours today $1,050 down, $100 mo. 


x x WANTED x 
BUILDING LOTS & HOMES [N MADISON 
CASH BUYERS WAITING 


@ WE HAVE MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM e 


ROZYCKI REALTY CO. 


“The House of Real Estate” 
2216 MADISON AVE. 


877-6108 877-6109 451-7946 
WALTER ROZYCKI, Broker CARL HACKNEY, Agent 
rs 


is a graduate of local 


She invites all 
Abrams Realty 1, 
931-3921. 





ABRAMS REALTY 1 is proud to announce 
the addition of JOYCE RATHMANN to its 
ever growing professional sales staff. Joyce 


Washington University and Belleville Area 
College. She resides at 4506 Ball Ave. with 
her husband, Gene, and Daughter, Corby. 
her friends to call 
877-1900 or 


schools and attended 


her at 
at home, 











KEY REALTY 


Marge Koelz, Broker 
Route 143 North—Highland, III. 
654-2179 

Hours: 9 a.m. — 8 pim. 
1168. JUST LISTED! Cozy home inexpensive price!4 room 
home on 100’ lot. $6,700 and it’s yours. Bond Co. 
4139, 2% ACRES and 6 room home in ¢ountry. Only $25,500! 
Highland S.D; F : 
4138. $7,900! 2 B/R mobile home on 1 acre. Bond Co. 
4126. MODERN HOME on 5 acres. '§ B/R's & carpeted 
throughout. 50’s. Bond Co. J 
4127. SPACIOUS 4 room home on 1 acre. Hillsboro. 40's. 





4141. 35 ACRES or will divide. Perfect for subdivision or 
weekend get-away. Near Carlyle Lake. # 

4143. ST. JACOB. Horse farm, all fenced jwith small lake, 40x60’ 
horse barn, 1975 home, wood burning firpplace in spacious liv. 


room and 15 rolling acres. 5 








+ 


We List, Sell and Lease 
COMMERICAL & INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY ONLY 
“Go With'the Professionals" 


DOLAN COMPANY 345 7411 


Iinois Commercial-Industrial Div. 


654-9888 


HIGHLAND 


STAWNTON, TROY, 
GREENVILLE, 
5 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU ~ LITCHFIELD 


2910: GIVE YOUR BUSINESS more! exposure! Here’s a 

spacious commercial bldg. just off highway; on 1.88 acres. Call 

us today, 

3521: 10-ACRE HOMESITE with & . Qui 
tates some frees and pond. Quiet 

488: SPARKLING NEW room home on about ¥% acre. 

Fireplace, formal dining room, 2 full baths; in beautiful NEW 

area. Perfect for commuter. A 

3528: EVERYTHING YOU NEED, on 'your own ground: 4 

bedroom home with formal dining room full basement. On 3.4 

acres, fenced on 3 sides. = ARR 

3516: JUST LISTED! 4 bedroom home, jfist a minute from the 

highway. $12,000! z : 


Ce SEs 
OLZINGER 


REAL ESTATE 


AGENCY INC. 


BROWN 
REALTORS 


eae aera 


pied Rey 


7-96C: 3 BEDROOM BRICK Well 


psc 
O23 allbly 
(7, fal 

7 
NATIONWIDE 
AFFILIATION. 


eRe ea a se ea 7) 
Oe Nae Mes} 


decorated, with bar, stove, sink 


refrigerator, full basement, large corner lot, near Hwy. 162. 


$44,850, 


7-96C—3 BEDROOM BRICK: Well decorated, with bar, stove, 


sink, refrigerator, full basement 
$44,850 


large corner lot. Near Hwy. 162. 


7-37C—SITUATED on a large corner lot with trees, this spacious 4 
room brick, ranch is an ideal retirement home. The extra large 
gorage is handy for storage $40,000 


HORSE FARM 


10 acres with several good out buildings, pond, good road, 100 
yeor old farm house in St. Jacob, IIlinois 


$64, 


900 


7-128C: 2700 SQ. FT. IN ARLINGTON. Huge split foyer across 


the lake, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths 
walkout kitchen, $68,900. 


fireplace, formal dining room, 


7-100—ONLY A MILE FROM 1-270: 4 bedroom, brick ranch, 


finished basement with family 
Priced in $50's 


room, bar, and large kitchen. 


MERIDIAN HILLS 


Only 1 mile from 1-270. Brand new brick home, minimum 
square footage is 1,400 square feet. Priced from upper 50's to 
mid 80's. Some lakeside homes available, 


CASEYVILLE 


787: $32,500—Very neat home on large lot, 1% car garage, 


Unit 10 schools 


OC: $26,900—3 bedrooms, 1 bath, like new inside. 


2c: F.H.A., V.A., $22,500, 


bedrooms, 1% baths, full basement and family room in Madison. 
7-149€: $31,500, Unit 10 schools, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, family 


room, and central air. 


large roomy 2 story house, 2-3 


03 — LOVELY BRICK WITH 4 giant bedrooms in Meridian 
s. Full finished basement with family room and fireplace, 24% 


baths, large deck with seating area, and 2 car ov 


FOR SALE by owner, 5 room 

home well built located in the 
heart of the Ozarks in Oregon 
County, Missouri, Ideal for 
retired couple close to 
everything. $8,500.00. Call Jess 
Hollis 877-2827. 1227 


2 BEDROOM BRICK duplex, 
good location, $43,000.. Earl 

* Jackson Co., 398-1400. 1227 
OWNER MOVING— 
Immediate possession of 6 
room brick, fireplace, patio, 
built-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, tv 
room, dining room, carport. 
Many extras. 2003 Lindell, 877- 
3256. 1227 


3 BEDROOM HOUSE— 

Unfurnished. Aluminum 
siding. Fenced yard. Phone 876- 
0295. 1223 


“THE ONLY thing wrong with 
this house, is that it doesn’t 
belong to you”! Make an ap- 
pointment to see this 7 yr. old 
brick-frame ranch style home 
on 1 acre. 3 bedrooms, 1% 
baths, family room w-wet bar- 
fireplace, plus “specials” that 
stay. Holzinger Real Estate 
Agency, 220 N. State, Litchfield, 
217-324-2188. Our computerized 
listing service brings you faster 
results! 1223 
“GET THE best for your $$'s”! 
See this excellent income or 
investment property, ideally 
situated on 7% acres off 1-55. 
Manicured grounds, established 
business (advertised in Travel 
Guide). 13 of the 14m 
homes are furnished and ren- 
ted. Overnite camp grounds 
have 24 level spaces w-complete 
hook-ups. 4 additional buildings, 
equipment, plus many extras. 
Take advantage of the “peak 
travel season’! Call Holzinger 
Real Estate Agency, 220 N. 
State, Litchfield, 217-324-2188. 
Our computerized listing ser- 
vice brings you faster result- 
s! 1223 


LS ola Ld p 


50 X 100 LOT “has 10x55 fur~ 

nished, air conditoned trailer. 
Adjacent 50x100 lot, has own’ 
hook-ups. Location Lake of: 
Ozarks. Call 931-6066. 2.2.27 


TRY A PRESS-RECORD © 
CLASSIFIED AD | 


size goragt 


Real Est. for Sale y 


5 ACRES WITH 2 bedroom 

home and barn. $25,000.00, 
financing available. 8 room 
home on 4 acres with several 
outbuildings. $40,000.00, con- 
tract for deed. 18 acre hog farm, 
all fenced, 250 pig nursery. 
44x90 machine shed, good home. 
Shank Real Estate, Greenville, 
Illinois, 618-664-2366 after 6 call 
664-3000. 2223 


NEWER 1% STORY brick, 

nestled in a quiet court. Ideal 
for large family. School bus at 
end of court. 4 bedrooms, 1% 
baths, carpeting, central air, 
finished basement, carport, 
garage and many extra’s. Drive 
by No. 18 William John Court, 
then call 797-6791. 222 


3 ACRES LOCATED % mile 

east Rt. 159 on North side of I- 
270. Trees, runing water, ideal 
location for homesite. Priced to 
sell $11,500. 618-288-7685. 2 2 27 


BARGAIN! BARGAIN! Six 

miles from Dover, Tenn., two 
miles from beautiful lake, 
boatdock. 10%4 acres beautiful 
-hilltop, good road frontage. 
Surrounding’ land selling for 
$1,000-$1,200 per acre. 
Individual selling for cash and 
asking $850 per acre. Call 1-615- 
827-2692. 2223 


Business for Sale 3 


: A-l TAVERN BUSINESS-Ideal 

Madison _location-All 
equipment'is included with sale. 
Now showing great profits. 
Extra income with apartment 
upstairs, and full basement 
downstairs. For details and 
showing call: Century 21, Royce 
Realty 876-5050. 3223 


ESTABLISHED. Madison 
Tavern For Sale— Hard work 
— Suecess — $$$ when. you 
purchase this extra high income « 
business opportunity,, Owners. 
relocating—would like fast sale., 
Call Rozycki Realty Co.— 877- 
6108 — 877-6108 or 451-7946 or 
write to P,O. Box 693, Granite 
City, Il. All singuiries © con- 
Aidential. 31 26tf 


. Private bath, air 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 
Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978 Page 31 


ALL BRICK Granite City 

Tavern. Grossed over. 
$100,000.00 -a year. All equip- 
ment included that is necessary 
to-have a good business, Added 
income with, eleyen rooms 
upstairs plus a full: basement.: 
For details call: Century 21,, 
Royce Realty 876-5050. 3223 


Mobile H. for Sale 5A 


TOTAL ELECTRIC: New 1977 

12° wide mobile home. 2 
bedrooms. Save over $1,000,' 
now reduced to $7,200. No trade. 
Fred’s Mobile Homes, Illinois 
Rt. 3 & Rand, Hartford, Il. 
Phone 254-1858. 5A 227 
MOBILE HOME Moving: Fred 

W. Vogel - I.C.C. Licensed and 
insured. Local moving only. 
Fred’s Mobile Homes, Illinois 
Route 3 & Rand, Hartford, Il. 
Phone 254-1858. 5A 227 


1974 REGENT— 14x65. Modern 

2 bedroom, 2 full baths. 
Skirted, porch, tool shed, air 
conditioning. Excellent con- + 
dition, $9,500. Negotiable. Call; 
931-2991 5A 227 


‘ONE PLUS acre— small apple! 

orchard, lovely deluxe 2° 
bedroom mobile home. 2 baths. ; 
931-1664 or 1-314-867-4987. 5A 3.9; 


2 BEDROOM mobile home with 
attached day room and at-) 
tached beauty shop. 2 car: 
garage. Private lot. In Granite. 
Call (314) 837-2528. 6 227; 
THREE BEDROOM __un- 
furnished house at 1309 Carr,: 
G.C, Ist & last months rent, 
required, $190 month, Call 344-' 
8312 632 
NICE sleéping room in private 
home. Gentleman. 2438 
Cleveland. Call 451-7462. 6 32 
7 ROOMS, fenced yard, located 
in Madison, No pets. $150 a 
month, Call after 5 p.m. 876- 
1770. 6223 


UVa ele tials 


STYLE CRAFT— 12x60 2- 
bedroom, 1972. Like new 
furniture. Call 877-3696. 5A 36 
ONE BEDROOM furnished 
apt., $120. 2601 E. 25th, 931 
2540. 7223 
3 FURNISHED ROOMS, up- 
stairs, clean reliable adults 
only. No pets, alcohol or drugs. 
Can be seen in day time only 
2316 lowa 7223 
3 ROOM UNFURNISHED apt. 
in Granite. Adults — No pets. 
Call 877-6324, 2223— 
NICE, 2 room furnished apt. 
Middle age lady preferred, 
~ large closets, no children, no 
pets. Deposit. 2519 Grand. Call 
877-1636. a 7223 
2013A BRYAN— 3 room nicely 
furnished. Clean, quiet apt. 
conditioner, 
Utilities paid. One or two em- 
ployed adults. N8 pets, drugs or 
alcohol. Call 876-8755. 7227 
GASLIGHT WALK apts. 
Large 2 bedroom garden 
apartment. Refrigerator, 
range, central air, carpeting, 
drapes, $195 per month plus 
$195. Security deposit. No pets. 
Call 931-6489. 7227 
2 FURNISHED ROOMS plus 
utility room; * very 
reasonable; all utilities in- 
cluded. Inquire 1213 Madison 
Ave. 7227 
VERY NICE 3 rooms, un- 
furnished, 931-3432. 7227 
3°RMS. Near town. Clean, quiet 
area. Accepting applications 
from retired or working person, 
middle aged and up. No drugs. 
No alcohol. References 
required. Call 452-5354. 7 227 


FURNISHED 3 rm. apt. No 

pets. $125 mo. Inquire 920 
McCambridge, Madison. Call 
452-3378. 7223 
4 _ROOMS FURNISHED— 

Carpeted, air conditioned, 
private entrance. All utilities 
paid. Call 876-8981. 7223 


3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. over 

garage, $125.00 mo. Working 
adults preferred. Before 2 p.m. 
876-0482. 7223 
NEWLY DECORATED 4 room 

apt. 2 private porches, 1 block 
from park. Washer & dryer 
hook-up & storage area. Deposit 
required & references. No pets. 
Working couple preferably: 877- 
8362. : 71227 
3 ROOM APARTMENT. Stove 

& refrigerator. Clean. 
Downstairs. Accept one child. 
Utilities paid. Call 931- 
2393. 7223 
FURNISHED. 1 ui es 

paid. Carpeted & draped. 
Central héat and air. One adult 
preferred. Referénces and 
deposit— Call 877-5739: 7223 


ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS 

for 3 room apartment. Car- 
peting, air conditioner, built-in 
kitchen with stove & 
refrigerator furnished. Single, | 


’ married couple, or older person 


preferred. No pets. Pay own 
utilities. References & deposit. 
Call 877-6843 or 877-5739. 7223 


AVAILABLE NOW— Attractive 
color coordifated one 
bedroom apartment in 
.Maryville. Carpeted & draped. 
“Utilities paid except electric. 
$175*monthly. Call 618-277-8816 _ 


618-692-5245, TR © 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD  Thurs..Feb, 23.1978. Page 32 


Apts. for Rent 7M Apts. for Rent 


A Great Pla: 


ice to Live... 


BECAUSE WE MADE IT THAT WAY! 


MOST MODERN 
1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS and 
2 BEDROOM, 112 BATH, TOWNHOUSE 
WITH SWIMMING POOL and ALL THE LATEST CONVENIENCES 


VILLAGE APARTMENTS 


‘UNDER NEW mM. 


Entrance 2600 Pontoon Rd. 


ANAGEMENT, 


Phone 931-5356 


Manager 3905 Village Lane—Apt. D 





Now Leasing... 


@ 


Modern New Apartments 


PONTOON PLAZA APARTMENTS 


Country Club Living With Private 


Swimming Pool 


2 Bedroom 

Kitchen 
Wall to Wall Carpeting 

and application for lease 


Living Room wi 


Cera 


Gas Heot and Central Air-Conditioning 


call 93) 


Complete GE 

Full Basement 

For information 
today 


th Dining Area 


mic Tile Bath 
1530 or 452-8118 


APARTMENT MANAGER IN APT. No. 7 


Gaslight Walk Apts. 
2 BEDROOM TOWN HOUSES 


eCarpeting ef 
eModern e 


lectric Kitchen 
Decorated 


RESIDENT MANAGER ON PREMISES AT 


4037 KATHY DRIVE 


— APARTMENT 1 


PHONE: 931-6332 


2 & 3 ROOM FURNISHED 
apartments. Everything paid. } 

Low rent. Call 876-1562 before 7 

p.m, 72.27 


3 ROOM APT. furnished. 
Inquire 2411 Illinois. 7224 
COMFORTABLE— Furnished 
housekeeping room. Utilities 
paid. Men preferred. $75 month 
Call 877-8439, 7223 


UNFURNISHED 3 rooms, heat 
& water furnished. Adults 
preferred. 877-4580, 7227 


Licked ikea ous 


SLEEPING— Lady-gentleman. 
No narcotics. Elderly 
welcome. May cook. Call 876- 
8227 


sleeping rooms— 
1911 


R asonable rent! 
8223 


ing rooms for 
Second Street, 
66218. 87 12tf 


D ROOM. Call 876- 

! 8223 
FOR RENT sleeping rooms. 
Call 876-5001 after 6 p.m. 8 2 23 


Approximately 

800 sq. ft. Choice location. 
Corner of 2ist & State. For 
office or busipess. Call 877-5310 
or 877-1594, 9 11.3tf 


FOR RENT 


New small retail stores across 
from K-Mort in the New Mini-| 
Mall at Nameoki Village. 900 sq 
ft, each. Call. 
GREEN BERG DEV. CO. 
Phone 1-314-965-2000 


Misc. for Rent ut) 


3 ACRES ON Rt. 3 across from 
Shasta, zoned for about 
anything: Open terms. John 
Sobol Realty. Call 451- 
7431. 107 21tf 


BROKER HAS CASH— Wants 
to buy, houses. Call Chris at 
Abrams Realty, 877- 
2644. 12 12-2tf 
CASH FOR your home— On the 
spot appraisal. Broker has 
cash. Call Bernard Royce, 
Century 21, Royce Realty 876- 
5050. 12313 
WANTED to rent with option to 
buy: 3 or 4 bdrm, house in 
x area. References 


Cars for Sale 15 


1972 EL CAMINO, power 

steering-brakes and camper 
shell, $2,000, call 877- 
0633. 15 12 5tf 


MADDOX 
MOTORS, INC. 
4068 Nameoki Rd. 
Granite City, Ill. 
931-2233 
'77 PLYMOUTH FURY SALON: 4 door 


purchased direct from Chrysier Corp. 
Power and air, vinyl top, Balance of 


full Factory 

Warranty. 15,000 Miles 54195 
"TT DODGE ASPEN: 4 door, power and 
air. Purchased direct from Chrysler 
Corp. Balance of Full Factory Guarantee 
Vinyl Top. % 

12,000 Miles 


"77 AMC MATADOR WAGON: Purchased 
direct fram “AML “Balance of Full 
Factory Gaurantee. 5 
9,000 Miles 19 
"76 FORD RANCHERO: Power and ait. 
Extra Clean, 

WEEKEND SPECIAL 

"76 PLYMOUTH GRAND FURY: 4 door 
power 
tnd at 53295 
'T5 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS: Power and 
air, extra clean $ 

260 CID Engine... . 


"75 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 


ROYALE: 4 dr h.t. Loaded 33395 
(75 MERCURY MONTEGO MK: Station 


52895 
52895 


"75 BUICK CENTURY: 4 dr. Power and 
air. Real Clean $ 

25,000 Miles 

"75 MERCURY MONTEGO MX: 4 door, 
Power and air. 32795 


Vinyl top 
"74 FORD MUSTANG It me I: Power 


Brack stereo 695 
*1695 
momen, $1395 


(T2CHRYSLER NEWPORT: $9.1. QE 


51295 


"72 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE 
SEBRING: Power & Air 
51095 
‘650 


"71 BUICK ELECTRA 225: 
5995 


fagon. 
Power and air. 


"75 FORD LTD WAGON: 
Power and air. 


"74 FORD PINTO: 
‘Automatic with air 


Extra clean. Loaded 
'G7 VOLKSWAGEN VAN: 
Priced right 


"72 PLYMOUTH FURY III: 
4'Dr. Power & Air . 


! '73 CUDA, 340, balanced, blue- 

printed, auto., air, power, am- 

| fm 8-trk., new tires & paint, 
| every available factory option & | 

} more. Absolutely perfect inside 
& out, $2995.931-6209. 15 2.27 | 


TAD'S | 
SERVICE CENTER 
AND AUTO SALES 


Diagnostic Tune-ups 
General Repairs—Used Tires, 
Wheels—Fine Service 
Mechanic on duty 8 to 5 
REBUILT BATTERIES 
$17.95 -$19.95 


(Plus exchenge) 
| 1460 STATE ST. 876-6160! 


wheel drive. AM-FM cassette, 
| Roll bar. Call 876-4627 after 5 
p.m. 15 223 


’69 FORD TORINO, 2-door, V-8, 
. dio. Runs good, 
$300. Call 877-7104 
15223 


looks 
after 5. 


GIVE & TAKE 


Give up a few miles and take the SAVINGS! 
We have a limited selection of almost 
new cars that have 1,000 to 13,000 
miles — ALL WITH FACTORY WAR- 
RANTIES ,.. PRICED TO SAVE YOU UP 
TO *2,0001 

ORIGINAL 


7760 
"7760 
7750. 
*6375 


SALE 

78 Fury Station Wagon $5337 

'78 Cordoba 1,200 mites 

"77 Cordoba toaiea 

"77 Fury Sport2ar.uz........ 

"77 Volare custom 4 ar. 5615 

'77 Arrow GT seautitu 54877 
MANY OTHER EXCELLENT BUYS IN 

LATE MODEL USED CARSII! 


x SPECIAL + 
"69 MusTaNnc ConVERTIBLE 


6 cylinder, automatic, power steering, 
gir, extra sharp! 


ONLY *1595 


19TH & GRAND 452-3137 GRANITE CITY 


SALE on 
Au DEMO'S 


Z uve over 80 pre 


ed cars to choose from. 


iCOLLINSVILLE 
VOLKSWAGEN 2 BMW 

1832 VANDALIA 
COLEINSVILLE 345-5500 


"68 CADILLAC 4door, power 
stegring, power brakes, 
powef windows, power door 
locks.! All in excellent condt., 
$850. After 5 p.m. 877-3887. 6 
15 2 16tf 


FOR Austin Healy 
Sprite. Will sell parts. Call 
after 5 876-4443. 15223 


We Pay Cash for 
GOOD CLEAN CARS 
Any Make or Model 


LaRUE’S AUTO SALES 


226§ Madison Ave., 877-6304 


‘SWEENEY 
CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 


black 
trealeg running and great on 
retail $4 
"76 Ferd LTD, 4 Dr. Brown metallic with 
vinyl répf, one owner and in excellent 
conditidn inside take a test drive in 
this one Terrific bar een . $3395 
‘76 Pofitiae Gran Beautiful blue 
metallic:with white landeau 
was $5295 sales price . 595 
"76 Buick Eketra LTD, 2 dr. beautiful blue 
metallic, with white 'landeau rool, power 
Sun rook and all the other power extras, one 
of 3 kild luxury car. NADA retail $5750. 
Save maby $$$ with our price 995 
75 Ferd Torino full power. bright 
copy vetallic runs: ercalnet MAI 
$2580. rice 
"75 Old: Cuties Coupe, white with white 
inter i power, runs and looks super 
NADA ralail $3300 our sale price 5 
"TT Pontiac LaMans, 4 Dr. Beau silver with 
red vinyl interior, Power steering and 
brakes ‘bir cond. Sharp car. Our tpcia 
Snow Bites Price. $3395 
swaaniy cn PLYMOUTH IN 
LAROEST SELECTION OF 
Guam duane seapt ro 00 UseD Cand 
8 THE INTIRE AREA. STOP BY AND FIND 
just nif CAR YOUR LOOKIN FOR. ON 
Twn SCF BANK PIMAMCING. 


For Quick and Efficient Service 
On Your Car or Truck 


STOP IN AND SEE 


BILL WASSER 


SERVICE MANAGER 


WE SERVICE ALL MAKES". 


B. E. HOHLT, INC. 


1837 MADISON AVE. GRA 


VAN INSULATION 
CALL 452-1424 


NEED A CAR? 
Rent a FORD from 
> ‘60 Ge 
BeucKman 


1823 Vandalia - Collinsville - 344-5105 
WE RENT PINTOS, GRANADAS, LTD II, 
THUNDERBIRDS, LTD WAGONS, 
and 12 PASSENGER VANS. 


ask for 
DON 
FUHRHOP 





NITE CITY, ILL. 


; NIEDRINGHAUS AT MADISON AVES. 


°72 GRAN TORINO, full power 
& air, $1,000. Call 931- 
0732. 15 223 
4 CK REGAL, power 
brakes, sun- 

15 223 

‘Ts BUICK Estate Wagon, 
power, air, cruise control, 
new brakes, new radial tires. 
$3, . Call 876-8834. 15 223 
1976 FORD— F-150. Explorer. 
Air, insulated camper shell 
with insert. Extras. Call 238- 
7642. 15.223 


ELGEE'S 
AUTO SALES 
102 Madison Ave. 
876-1588 
"62 Ford Van 
"64 Ford Va 
"48 Ford P/U 
'70 Cadillac. 
'71 Ford 9 Pass. 
’69 Pont. Bonn. 2 px. 
63 Lincoln Cont. . 
*70 Ply. Wag. 1 owner . 
OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM 


- $295 


1973 MUSTANG Mach I— 

Automatic, air, power 
steering & brakes. Call 459- 
3670. 15223 
1972 MIDAS-MINI motor home, 

20-ft. Dodge chasis. Self- 
contained. Call 459-3670. 15 2 23 
1972 2-DOOR MALIBU, green, 

75,000 miles, full power, air, 
am-fm 8-track, new steel-belted 
radials. $1395. 797-0307.' 15 2 23 
1969 GE, p.s., p.b., ac. 

Runs real good. $375.00. 1962 
Ford Falcon. Good motor and 
trans. Or for parts. $40.00. 876- 
5299. 15 2.23 


USED 
TIRES 


ALL SIZES! 


Seances and BIAS PLYS 


conomy Tire Sales 
Econom Hone 452-7950 
69 FORD GALAXIE: new tires, 

$300.00. 876-4188. 15223 
1975 ‘AMINO, low mileage, 

931-5267 after 6, except Wed. & 
Thurs. 15 227 





BOB BROCKLAND PONTIAC-GMC 


HWY, 111 AT MARYLAND AVE. 


FAIRMOUNT CITY, ILL. 


ERNIE DARNELL 


YOUR TRICITY 


PONTIAC REPRESENTATIVE 


CUSTOMER SALES FOR GRANITE CITY 
MADISON, AND VENICE RESIDENTS 


Ernie Darnell! 


CALL 271-2700 


Prices Are Tumbling - $aving$ Are Skyrocketing 


SAE 


a 
ALL MODELS AVAILABLE 


cet VOGT e710) aaa 
Se 
Saas Wl 
Rs ea. 

© 42 MONTH FINANCING 


© PAY OFF YOUR OLD CAR 
om Lez 


‘75 VW BUS 
NOW 


was $4395 $3995 


‘75 RABBIT sunroof 
NOW 


was $2995 $2495 


‘77 RABBIT, air 
NOW 


=3395 


WAS 44595 


tel T 


was $2795 #2395 


‘73 VW 412 WAGON 


WAS *2795 SAVE 


‘716 COUGAR XR7 


Now 
$4295 


WAS $4995 


WAS $3995 mabe 


‘73 CHEVY 2 TON MpieKy P 


WAS $2995 2495 


‘TT CADILLAC DeVILLE 
NOW 


was 9595 $9595 


1832 Vandalia, Collinsville 
Phone: 345-5500 


ye SPECIAL NOTICE x 
Another First For Mathews Chevrolet: 


-By special arrangement, we now offer a 90 day (or 4,000 miles) LIMITED 
WARRANTY on all Used Cars from 1967-77 models! This takes the worry 
‘out of buying a used car! Extra Special for NEW CHEVROLET BUYERS: 
iMathew's is the only Chevrolet Dealer to offer the extended 24 
month/24 thousand mile warranty when you buy a new Chevrolet! 
,EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 1, 1977. 


MATHEWS CHEVROLET 


451-7913 


LACKERMAN BUICK 


a PINTO 
COUPE 


4 speed, radio, 
‘17 


heater, W/W tires, 
vinyl top, only... 


"72 BUICK 
ELECTRA 225 


2 door coupe; 
many: ea items, 


this week only. s ] 7 
'72 BUICK 
LeSABRE 


4-dr., green in color, 
full power and ai oi 


1795 


HIGHWAY 1-270 AND 
NEW HALLS FERRY ro. 


00 


PRE-OWNED SPECIALS 


- '73 MAZDA 
2 DOOR 


'75 FORD 
MUSTANG II 


$2695 


ae BUICK: 
ELECTRA 


4 speed. 
tadio, Lanclau roof 

model, 31,xxx miles, 
this week only... .. 


AM/FM 


95 


4-dr., many power 
items; AM/FM/tape 
deck, low mileage, 
this week only... . 


95 


CORONET 


$2695. 


ACKEI RMAN BUICK 


Custom, 4-dr., 6-cyl.. 
ait, look 
just 21 xxx 
miles, like new, only - . 


OVER 100 USED CARS 


'75 MONTE 
CARLO 


SEE $3895 


See this one, just 
19, xxx miles, only 


lhe OTE; ase 


SAVE YOUR VACATION MONEY 
NOW & HERE 


TO.CHOOSE FROM 


'74 BUICK 
ELECTRA 


Auto. trans.. run good, 
here's alittle car with 
just 31,xxx miles, 

this week onl 


$1395 


'74 NOVA 
2 DOOR 


6 cyl., stick 
- onthe floor, 
aclean car 


'76 BUICK 
SKYLARK 


Coupe Landau, i 
silver, V-6 cyl. a 


auto., power, air 


'74 CUTLASS 
SUPREME 


WINDOW VAN 


Auto. trans., three 
seats, this 


IEE 2 ee A A A 


THE DIFFER 


Coupe Landau 
model, power, air, 
this week only . >. 





Thurs., Feb. 23,1978  Page33 


1811 Vandalia 
Collinsv! am. 


Just 15 Minutes 
from Granite 


PHONE 451-1247 


66 CHEVY— p.s., p.b., air, 
rebuilt engine, new. battery, 


$200, 876-8119 after 4 p.m. 16 2.25 Newsboys or Girls 


Neighborhood Routes 
Apply 
Granite City News 
1830 (Rear) State St. or 


Call 876-6050 
Monday. Thursday or Saturday 


Business Opp. yal 


COMBINATION cook & 
waitress apply in person. 


LADIES' APPAREL 
ALL SIZES 
Open 10-4 — Tuer. thru Sat. 
NEAT REPEATS 
2901 IOWA 


Learn automobile suspension and 
brake work, mim. 2 years expor- ¢ 
ience or equivalent service sta- } 
tlon work. 


SUBMIT RESUME TO: 


P.O. BOX 119 
GRANITE CITY, ILL. 62040 





BABYSITTER— My home. You 

provide transportation. 3 
small children. Experienced & 
mature (over 30 yrs. old), Call 
451-1612. aia 


HELP WANTED: Licensed real 
estate salespeople. Call— 
Abrams 877-1900. 22 12 12yf 
INTEGRATED Holy Ghost 
School needs girls over 16 for 
secretaries, teachers & 
members. Good opportunity. 1- 
314-727-3446 St. Louis, Mo.22 2 23 


Call or write toll free 
Toczok & Son's Mfg. Inc. 
4920 Nome St. 
Denver, Co, 60239 
1-800-525-1184 
8a.m.-4 p.m 


°67 THUNDER 

Good condition, all power, 
rebuilt motor. Will trade for 
pickup truck. Call 876- 
1403. 15 2.27 


76 CHEVY one-ton pickup, 
camper special, 30,000 miles 
876-5939. 15 2.23 
1977 CHRYSLER LABARON. 
All power. $6,000. Call 931- 3950. 
REPLY TO 


PRESS-RECORD BOX 5 


1013 Delmar, Grenite City, 


9-5. 


ASSISTANT 
MANAGERS 
POSITION 


Experience Preferred 
but not necessary. 
Many company bene! 
Salary negotiable. 
INQUIRE AT 


CROWN 
FINANCE 


1320 Niedringhaus Ave. 
Call 877-0993 








3600 NAMEOKI RDO. 


MANAGER IN TRAINING: 
Finonce, some college, train for 
90 day period and then relocate 
to anywhere in state to manage 
own office. Ideal candidate 
needs finance company and 
managerial experience. Fan- 
tastic benefits. Fee negotiable. 
Salary 9600K plus. Mr. Ingrham. 


SECRETARY: To executive, 
great benefits, dictaphone, 
typing 90 wpm, shorthand 120, 
four years experience. F 
paid. Salary $650 and up. Mrs. 
Ebling. 





CLERK TYPIST good figure 

aptitude with some office 
experience, $470, Granite City 
Private Employmént Agency, 
2023 Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2 23 
TYPIST will train good typist in 

work processing center, $550, 
Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2.23 


MAG CARD Il OPERATOR One 
year experience. Fee poid. 
GENERAL OR coast ac. Salary $500 ond up. Mrs. Ebling. 
COUNTANT: Local manufac 
turing division, B.S. Accounting. 
Fee paid. Salary $13,000 to 
$15,200. Mr. Ingrham. 


SECRETARY-BOOKKEEPER: Lo- 
cal firm, would be doing light 
bookkeeping, some billing, 
typing 45-50 and shorthand 
would be helpful. This is a very 
versatile job. Fee negotiable. 
Salary $550. Ms. Goodman. 


Saar 1s Cars for Sale FF] °65 FORD FAIRLANE— 6- NEW3-PIECE couch sets, $190. WELL tept carpets show the WASHERS & DRYERS— Also 
= 7 condition. '68 Buick Electra for and electric ranges, new spot cRaning. Rent electric 1739 
‘parts, Call 877-7830. 15223 hideabeds, small filing shampiper $2.50. Reese DatLy SPECIAL? Sap of the “HE Reta b Eat] 19) 
MODEL YEAR ; ? Saup WANT TO BUY— Beer can . 
condition. Call 931-5310 sets, living room sets, couches, BEDDItG— Sears-O-Pedic fet i AFTE! 
CLEARANCE $1,200. 15223 chest of drawers, stereos, love with Ynattress cover— fase, A° Cupbeards, a7 Callsre2ms, 19 9 at GRADUATION... 
© WE BUY used furniture & Your decision now 
Excellent condition. AM-FM ressers, lamps, dinette sets, and frame. Good condition. 1 
B-track. Mags. Call 76- baby bed, chairs, wringer Both 125.00. Call 931- Whole pies on order or by the don’t have more than a hundred your life. Our training 
slice. The_Pie Cupboard,’ 19th dollars worth. No junk please! fell SESE, 80) OR ah 
1972 RANCHERO,V-8 Seri i aoe high’ AM-FM:@-track home unit, 9ndD 22 then 8 hundred fictds, 
se ars odd , book Good fondition, $75. Call 877- MIXED FIREWOOD— 7153. 1932 and you'll begin gaining 
and camper cover, very good stands, black & white tvs, used 7830. Guaranteed to please, $35 WANTED— Drafting board & Tecations, around the 
condition. $1,725 or trade. Call hide-a-beds, new portable 12 X 15 | aerylie braided rug. world, We offer 30 
LINCOLN/MERCURY §f 931-2248. stereos, freezers, coffee andend _ Brown! & tan. $60. Call 931- TE WANTED— Sponsor for softball devs, OF cot Ieee 
ittusuat lL L;§ «team. Finished first last year Be auton ede 
We must make room for NEW CAR Customized. Call 931- cab-over camper, fully 2SETS OF golf clubs. Bags & EJ year, and all medjcel 
15227 equipped. Walker for han- | carts, |$95.00 each. 1 girls GIGANTIC indoor rummage there again this year! Please vided. ,You'l oso have 
: : - call (618) 288-5863. 1 OHS AS Si 
you're looking for a particular car let Full power. Call 931- cleaners, ‘baby walkers, play 1928 17227 23, 24 & 25. From 10. a.m. to10 WANTED! People interestéd aia eoseas aousalte 
me help you by giving me your name 5316. 15227 pens, rocking horse, bathinette, FOAM TORN PADDING. New low p.m. at Carol’s Future Auction in good government, Vote— good, we're an unusu- 
‘ ety ; nd coming with us 
2541 Tack, china cabinets, framed sizes. Earl's Discount, 19th and between Lake Drive and Hwy. judge. 19 320 fom t 
A hoe Wagon. $223 and signed oil paintings por-  Clevelanil. 17713tf 111." Sale covers over 4000 “28________! Ra weston ite 
about . er It jectors, Also, 8°18 &.35. A Great Way 
: iter, new 36” bathroom iri collectible items, new things _ Projectors. Also, 8, ; 
book r ck 7 $35.00.. Needs repairing. 644 2 . i 4 ' of Life 
LATE MODEL AND NEW $1100.00 book value. Quick vanity. 1335 Edwardsville Rd. yeftersos, Venice. €. 53 and old things, or just about ™Mm. film. 451-9528. Any con 
ledringhovs Ave. 
LINCOLNS AND MERCURYS ee battery, seareanty, 6000's Evel WASHE: Crone 
i ryone Welcome. Hope tosee WASHERS & DRYERS not ‘Gronite City I 
or 6 months, Whole car very sale. Works! 87-1465. 17223 Jor there, N7A 228. working, Call 931-3450, 19 3.9 
NEW LOCATION KINDLING WOOD for sale 
MERCURY A aia Call ren CURTAINS, Etc. and white or color. Working work from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. 
exis [READY MADEAND CUSTOM. $60. {GE.  retrigerator: “wanra to buy Depression = not working condition.’ Call Apply in person from 3 to 5 p.m. 
FINANCING work, Good price. 258 cu. in. 6- AND DRAPES freezerj! $75. 3-pc. bedroom WANTED to | Dansware aby Zt 
cylinder. Call 877-3877. 15 2 23 Pp ANTIQUES WANTED: Fur- saARAH COVENTRY jewel 
b.tu. cbntral air unit, self- lect Galle Gedaatsse niture, Blassware, clocks, needs 5 ladies. Nielaveneemat, 
contained, $200. 876-2296. 17223 Collector 2 ele 382 
1971 FORD MAVERICK 6-cyl., 4 WHITE WALL H-78x14 — 2 QOS a ED pre .0700 1932 
: Vs : ‘H-78x14 — 2 USED PIANOS, organs from dio! 34 1 t 
pe automatic steel-belted snow tires on rims. All like $195.00; Used Wurlitzer giorm dooce loft eight ait ens Pry 
D.S., D. 0 ; : 
Good condition. 3100 Fehling Motors, Niedringhaus at day. 17223 $595.00; Others. (Open Sun jp p 
Rd. 15223 Cleveland, 876-7429. _15223 tNSULATED camper shell, days) cash price sale: Miller, TREE per ipod romme:made 
65 BEL-AIR CHEVROLET — $200, 931-5181. 17223 Story Clark. 69 pianos, floor sue tae Shar - rant 816 
th: hout, a ‘ or Me _ 
atlas RG aoniiness cree moreland. 15223 “aryer. set. $150.00. Avocado. $845.00; Consoles $919.00- “7, PARTS STORE 
trade for pickup truck. Call 797-1972 PINTO stick shift. Good 93)-1151. 17223 $1295.00. KimBall Home 15’ BAS& BOAT, fully equipped, 
6259 or 931-3755 ask for Mike. gas mileage. A real buy at g-piECE living room or den OF8ans, complete selection. $1650. .Call 877-3416 after 4 Husband and wife or father and son team. 
25 223 $595.00. Courtesy Motors, furniture, refersible leather Biermans Warehouse, p.m. 1732 P % ° S 
1971 FORD PINTO, $395. 1965 Niedringhaus at Cleveland, 876-4“ Horculon, $400, Call err, College, Sparta, - FIREWOOD, $40 pickup Toad. Be your own boss in a fine auto:parts store. 
Pontiac V-8, auto., $275. Both 7429. 15223 oais : e 37223, “ee ES noe {ish . Hickory: bet 9and5, Hook's T: 
cars have new batteries, win. °75 CHEVY MALIBU, 4door, <inj7ATURE SCHNAUZER ree Service, 931-044! experience preferr ween 9 and5, Hook's Tavern, 
terized, etc. 451-1318. 15293 full power we-air, high Ste Aer“ Beculifure 12 CU, Ff. Sears chest freezer, . pretences: 25th-Madison Ave. 22223 
1967 GALAXIE 500. Good shape, Mileage. $1900. 876-6578, 15223 isfeiigent & so cuddly. 876. $150. GAF zoom-lens mov REPLY TO PRESS-RECORD BAR MAID apply in person 
Runs & looks good, $600. Call 1974 MAZDA 4-dr. wagon, RX-3 3517. 17223 camera, projector, screen, | BOX 34 
877-0815. 15293 steel belted radials, stick “srexig eply. § tuck Ures and 110-rolls of free film, $200, - Tavern, 25th-Madison 
INTERNATIONAL —Tandamn $MM Only $higean, Courtesy * TE sal core dor or gil Sa seperately. Siereo PARTNER WANTED Soy CEE EMMMMET 1°" Bie 
Neate ter. Vena Cleveland, 876-7429. 15223 Cotes ne bors, faeinees player and AM-FM radio, $75. Must have $3750 cash for in. MEDICAL ASSISTANT for 2 MECHANIC 
condition Reasonable! Callas. 1972 CAMARO, six-cyl., tAhlelaraps 877.70. 17223. “NET TECTION | Rai 72.27: Wensory, BOxNo. s.eraGranite doctors iparGtime,, (ox 
os "5203 automatic. New tires, As is ‘2 ps. - NEED PROTECTION ! Raise ———-—________ City Press-Record 21223 perience preferred but will HELPER 
SE FORD FAIRLANETS door $1500.00. Courtesy Motors, 12BUSSEATS, $3.00each. Call | your own, German Shepherd reise: dao Shar ohio eo GOOD INCOME: Morning Consider a willing to learn & TO 
oor Niedri 5 ” 452-1023. 17227 puppies — males only. Cal a » ‘ s applicant. Interviews to 
; ' Niedringhaus at Cleveland, 876 _4521023.__ P Br Globe ‘te, 425 dailys Anxious applican 
hardtop, V-8, automatic, runs 7479, ig223 GAS DRYER= Like new. Call 5855. _._ tv 238; Hist Calloassen. 1739 "595 weekends. Reasonable! Selected applicants only. Send 
good, cheap transportation, pean a 931-0712. 17227 FREE tofarm or home outside WE COPY & enlarge BEW and 57's 392 21227 resume to Box 28, c-o Press- 
$195. 4125 Division, aa six cyl, automatic, buckel, city. Alaskan Malamute, color pictures, with or without) “———~—"__________“S*" poo 22227 
1974 MUSTANG I. ite, seats, diamond tucked, $450.00 SEA RS female, AKC. Anyone living a negative. We also make HE fen. peoiaye and —— 
, 4-speed, power, am-fm tape. Courtesy Motors, Niedringhaus inside city need not call 876- passporis. Hi-Lite Studio, 1335 putiful Jeda Bliop Of your OPPORTUNITY IN 
low mileage, good condition, - 0134. 17223 19thSt. Call 451-6220. 1732 own. Featuring the latest in 
$1775 — 931-3508, 15223 atCleveland, 8767429.__15223 | Kenmore Washer | spance SIMPSON Simba, APPROXIMATELY go-yds, Jeans, demims and sportswear. | _ ENERGY CONSERVATION 
oo LTD FORD doa oncine 3 < E | -yds. inc! ‘ash i jastes: wing 
1969 LTD FORD, 428 engine ag (CHRP OLER NEWEORT, and Dryer Parts am, ssb 23-channel base used i carpet with pad. $14,500.00 includes | beginning | Fos' On, ¢n Jas Romtest Sines 
penUll Power, air & stereo. Can 51395 99, Courtesy Motors, | Also parts for sordford and of Station, cb radio with D104 Bedroom} set. Pole desk. Call [2YEMOTY, | Tmtures | and | manutaciurer is seeking select 
e seen at 1327 Madison Ave. or Niedsinghaus at Cleveland, 876. P jord ond al-| silver eagle microphone. Has 931-4120: 17223 y a people to represent thelr 
gall. Chuck Pyles, 876 7499, 18229 | electric vonges, cefrigerarons, oi] everything. $350. Cail _797- f Bears treezer, $125. Cache tine tor Me Jacheen [oe wisrk out of your h 
: ; rle ranges, refrigerators, alr ; A Gg 2 i wk out of your home 
sr NS 227 CHEVY Paicl Van ago | conditioning ond water heaters. 6258. 17 2:23 shelving. Call 877. (995) 960-4308, 21.2 27 = Highest earnings - Full 
74 CHEVELLE MALIBU 350 'Cheine, automatic, power | 2*i9!n old part and model. FREE PUPPIES— Part Irish 1029 a 
automatic, power steering p , Setter. Call877-0271. 17223 WILSON XSi golf cubs 135 : Alton area, 52-units, investment 
. we? steering and brakes, $2,995.00. 2 WILSON: X-31 golf clubs, 1-3-5 100 t bar-lounge (leased required. 
ower brakes, ai, $8,000 miles, Courtesy Mators, Nicdringhaus SUPREME SFT. Honey mini motor home. woods; 2-9-pw irons, bag and atwuniey, hers well. built 
Bs at Cleveland, 876-7429. 15 223 APPLIANCE Low mileage, engine, air, roof 50 used balls. $125. Call 288- downtown location, doing good 
1966 CHEVY MALIBU, good air, stereo & tape, cruise con- 5558. waa, ee REOte ows 
condition, a.c., Call 877-6711 2109 Johnson Road trol, tub & shower. Sleeps 6. PEDIGREE Chinchilla Persian  §350,000. ; 21223 
after 6 p.m 15224 452-5315 and 877-5559 Sell contadtiod eae: car o male itten. 4 months old. 
969 Z-28 CAMARO, 396 cu, in. - rade, $11,800. Stereo cabine! Ith guarantee. $150.00. Call 
1969 Z-28 CAMARO, 396 cu. in., ED SAYS: American National $35. Call 931-2629 17223 Sa mos’) ET) J 
pat ou Sig i cam; is an old line insurance [OUBLE-OVEN gas range — — 17.227 EXPERLENCED PERSON to sell insulation— No 
i intake & oy A 5 IFUL CABINET car i - 
snition, 400 turbo ‘trans. ¢QmPany. They have been of- Autocrat G.E. refrigerator 17 3 {tape _ salesperson. Open floor — cxberience necessary. 7 STOCKROOM PERSON 
ignition, 400 turbo trans., fering consumers good products fe Wigke Sy am-fm, turntable and tape parson Spe: ee Excellent pay and working 
Cragers. 1-618-259-4747. 15223 at competitive rates since 1903. fon i, went green marble deck, tayes included, $325. Call New & used. 1-3 commission, conditions, full time with | Meeting and air conditioning ex- 
1570 MUSTANG FASTBACK mpet d formica top table & 6 chairs. 93)9366. « 1732 Christmas bonus program. Call fringes, First class compan: perience helpful, but not 
390 G.T., 4-speed, $1,000. 877: pasa time, our rates on auto. Very good condition. Call 877- Wp supplies Visivoa: Mr. Bramhall, — Sweeney fringes. First class company | necessary. Good opportunity for 
828 the most competitive in the 727 ses ei Nn dept Cents to Chysler-Plymouth, Alton, Il. Complete resume to Box 31, c-0 | resume ond selory desired I het 
2034 tf : ne 1S-INCH Quasar color tv, $200. Tew coin dept. Cents to 221110tf press-Record with sal 7 
t 152 16tf 1969 CHEVELLE, oor industry. See or call Ed Call 877-5343. i727 Sellars. Ruy & sell silver & gold s — ress-Record = wi salary . 
’69 CHARGER: Full power & hardtop. Int. perfect. * ody Shemwell, 2740 Madison Ave. DINING ROOM 7 kitch coins, [:collections, silver desired in first letter. 22.223 
air, 383 — 4-bbl. Headers, good. Sell parts. Also 350 turbo. 876-5309 — 876-1903. 172 23 G set, kitchen set, Gojlars. {)pen 9 to 9 daily, till 5 JANITOR & BABYSITTERS (2 
931-2262. 15223 AMFM@track, 6 wallJulielte _ Tefrigera ore May a8 Sat. & Sundays. Denzer Card & positions), Must be at least 55 
876-7882 or 931-662 15223 1975 LINCOLN MARK IV— stereo with 2 speakers, 3-5 eeete ec a cus; Stationery, 16 Crossroads [Contact Mr. yrs. & low income. Call YMCA yQUNG LADY to do filing and 
1970 V.W. POP-UP camper. Loaded. Triple white, $6,750. taperflex skis, New, never used. ‘ble, beds, chairs & misc. 227 Plaza, Wameoki & Pontoon J Mr. Faist, or RSVP 876-3223. 22223 ~~ miscellaneous duties for 
Engine just been rebuilt, still Call 931-4968. 15227 °76 Dodge truck tailgate, 2 elec. ene TON OLE 1 Road, GrjniteCity, I. 17223 [petieville, WANTED— Experienced RN- Granite City law firm. Call 452- 
under warranty. Newly car- °7] CHEVY Impala Custom, 2- digit alarm clocks. Call 931-6896 wadlo: Mgele ie ae ART, DIEPRESSION, cut and Opportunity Co. LPN full or parttime needed 6100 ask for office 
peted, new tires. All equipment. door hardtop, $650. Motor- after 3. 17 2 23 . Pres carnival glass, ete. 2315 é for doctors pffice. Send resume manager. 22-2 27 
$2500.00. Will consider trade for trans, for ’68 Buick. 876- RANGE 32in. electric 78% NG, to Box 30, co Press- EARN extra money! Take 
older pick-up. 2416 Edison. Call 0861. 15227 _ Frigidaire. Harvest gold. FREE PUPS: Part German Oo dhp ORGAN “The EXPERIENCED SALESPE- Record. 2232 ‘orders for Lisa Jewelry. Call 
876-8495. 15227 73 CHEVY MALIBU, air, Self-cleaning. Like new. $175. _ Shepherd. Call 877-7647.17 227, HMMS dcganever created with RSON. References needed. OPPORTUNITY in real estate for free catalog sales kit on toll 
19% V.W. DASHER, 2dr. GT, power steering & brakes, After 4p.m. call 288-9726. 17223 BOYS’ CLOTHING size6 thru one ite cont wave Strong math background sales. Experience not free 800-631-1258. 22.313, 
32,000, mi., 4-spd.,am-fm, excellent condt. Make offer. 877. 100,000 B.T.U. furnace, $50. Call 12. Also baby clothing. 3025 {De Sang Pright Wave Deferred. Write Box No. 32, ¢-0 necessary. Call Mr. Page, 
good condition, $2,750. Call 452- 7965 — 876-2096. 15227 797-6729 after4p.m. 17223 Maryville Rd. 1732 trial. Ses how easy youcan play Granite City Press- Anderson Realtors, — 877- 
056.15 227 7 CHEVY PICKUP w-camper SOFA & love seal, 727 round MAGNAVOX CONSOLE stereo, the orgay. 876-2121... 17 1 10if record 223, USI zi 
1973 CHALLENGER shell. New tires, low mileage. _bed with canopy with built-in Plays speeds. Practically —" aS ouipMENT— New 
Excellent condition, $2,500. 376-2423 15223  t.v., stereo and tape deck, 2end new. 876-8528. 1732 “STE! a ee wise | 
15227 +53 FORD stake bed truck, $350, {ables and coffee table with FIREWOOD— Any amount _©useG 676-4324. _17 19 WW2.<c ; « veces 
6 DODGE PICKUP— with is223 Smoked glass. Dining set, and delivered and stacked. Call SINGER: TOUCH & Sew II — etro acemen' av 
camper shell. Call 931- pATSUN 71976 B210 sedan aj; Much more. After 6:00 p.m. Call 876-5330. 1736 Model'778. Has flip & sew L. 2040 
ea 15 227 Teen atece toe Gor 931-433: 17.227 open arin. Makes buttonholes, Miata ae 
conven T2516 steel-belted radials. Dn erates ice HOST Cleans Your pew mach there, Assume 
7 h tor. Excellent conditi ments of $16 each. For free 
1978 CAMARO— Call 797, 977 DODGE Tradesman Van— sees. Callosiass. 1733 home demonstration, phone S44- 
bese digg Feder & Huber Furniture 
camper trailer, 19’, fully self- Niedringhaus & Delmar Ave. SINGER. FUTURA 900, does 
contained, very good condition. everything. Makes but- 
THE ALL NEW 1 978’ Reese hitch and electric BREAKFAST AND lunch daily tonholes, sews on buttons, 
é s after 6 p.m. 1732 bread. The Pie Cupboard, 19th decorative stitches. Payments 
WANTED | People interested 24Delmar. 17227 of $18 ¢ach. For free home 
’ neg Ww T People interested . : 
Monte Carlo’s and Malibu’s in good government. Vote— fencing, double demonstration, phone 344- 
ae Expert erection. Free LAUNDRY DETERGENT, 50- 
eS Aa Woo! estimates. Reasonable prices. Ibs., 
877-4156 — 876-3670. 17330 9504 


20 delivered. 451- 
17615 


cylinder stick, $175. Good Color tvs, refrigerators, gas results of regular Blue Lustre expert repair. Call 931. CRANITECITY PRESS RECORD 
1972 CHRYSLER— Excellent cabinets, desk chairs, bedroom Dru; 17223 : DO IT RIGHT 
Day? Pie of the week? Call “ collections—large and small, 
1 wardrobes, ‘beds 
"75 SILVER FIREBIRD a50— Sca!s metal 1 new. Allo bookcase heedboard ee 
SALE PIES ! All your favorite kinds. appliances. Don’t call if you could affect the rest af 
OF oe, washers, trash compactor, new §597. jess 
<a and Delmar. 17227 1335 Edwardsville Rd. Call 452- Oe te -aeae 
. automatic with air, vinyl top case, washer & dryers, nite 17223 experience at one of our 
HAROLD COY load. Call 876-3441 1736. tools. Call 288-7769. 19 223 
73 CHEVY Sports Van: days of paid vacation 
‘73° CHEVY Sports tables, center tables, 10%-ft. O21. § 1722 
in Madison league. Hope to play Gental services are pro 
TRADES so we're trying harder. If par 
1973 FORD Gran Torino Wagon. dicapped, crutches, vacuum bicycle,. $10.00. Call 877- "sale, Thurs., Fri. & Sat., Feb poe eee 
and number. 136 CHEVY 2-door sedan body. baby buggy, rugs, office coat prices, 1”, 2”, 4” thick. Asst. House. Located on Hwy. 162 ill Johnson for Circuit ally good organization © 
a ee ees a WASHER Ea i WANTED— M Air Force 
GOOD SELECTION OF te71_ VOLKSWAGEN? table sewing — machine, yfayTAS WASHER & dryer, Sauare feet. We have antiques, ‘ovie cameras & 
sale $1000.00. New motor, tires ‘ ; rn . dition. 19 227 TSgt Jim Markham 
milec Call 452-7153. WHIRLPOOL WASHER for anything you're looking for. 
276-5235 
LINCOLN clean! Phone 877-4213. 15223 
Call 826-2423. 17223 . WANTED: Used TV's. Black }ELP WANTED: Age 18 up, to 
READY MADE AND Custom . | 7-PC. Witought iron dinette set, MAMETSAAT TRIS 19 
071 GRAMLIN— Needs some 
1971 GRAMLIN— Needs some Be netey on Apply in per Pm. 
Phone 344-3500 MINI-MALL suite, $§. Misc. items. 36,000 a4" qichos china, ete, Private 
" for Sale WA tobacco cans, anything old. Call Call g76-4929 after 3p.m. 22 2 27 
CABINi'T STEREO am-fm ——— 
radials, $695.00. _Courtes, x f ; i 
9 y new. Call 877-1890 Satur- studio. $495.00; Cable Spine g7y-7a12-after's p.m. pas 
170 CHEVY-VAN ates BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY 
$250, 2554 West- W¢.A. WHIRLPOOL washer & lose out. New Spinets $695.00. Thus: { ip aiay 
Send resume and salary requirements. Parts 
between 9 and 5. Hook's 
more, 81,000 miles, $695. Call 
Call 452-1068 after 5 p.m. 
876-2296. 15 223 
‘71 CORVETTE— Call 931-2516 1973 MARK TWAIN open bow sews on Buttons, stretch stitches 
Carpet Without Water 
i 5561. 17223 
fee ee oe eg ar Go ar 
Also, 
brake, if needed. Call 877-6711 Special, home-made soup and. monograms, plus many 
see Bill Johnson for Circuit dipped galvanized material. 5561. z 17223 


CLAIMS INVESTIGATOR 
TRAINEE: Complete training for 





931-1130 or 931-1264. 173 20 


Also the full line of Chevys 
Ready For immediate Delivery 


BISON AVE. 


‘3 load. Call after 7 ne gal 


42 As eG0 SIs) 
RENTALS 
"ALCULATORS @ 


3 MONTHS RENTAL 
APPLIES TO PURCHASE 


iat V Ld 


HINE Sales:' 
New ‘reduced prices. National Sehool 
|-N- _of Music, 877-4650. 
Used: 
powers,’ 

attachments, parts, vacuum 
ndays and! dows. Also wood lined & in- 
John and—Marie 
2612 East 
17330 


Brothers, Westerns, Di: 
Dressmakers. 


IRON And 
METAL 


St.. Madison 


876-6680 


O'DEL 


100 Stat 


R OILS: Philips Trop- 

Artic 66, Havoline, Quaker 
State, Penzoil, Shell X-100, 
‘Permalube, Mobiloil, Golden 
Shell all at discount prices. 
Type A ATF. Earl’s Discount 
Store, 19th and Cleveland. 
177 39tf 

PIANOS, floor samples. Values 


up to $1450. Now at drastically 


171 6tt 


“TRUCK TOPS— Large’ color 
séléction on display. All 
aluminum with bubble win- 


sulated. Fred’s Mobile Homes, 
Ul, 254-1858. 7227 


Iifinois Rt.3 & Rand, Hartford, _ 


GOLD danke style sofa w- 

matching chair, end table & 
coffee table. Excellent condt. 
$150. 931-3815. 17223 


REMINGTON MODEL 700- 
B mm magnum, New, 
$260. Call 876-5641. 17.223 
ALU LOTS, 15-inch, 
Ford, $150. Four Chevy 


Corvette rims, $75. 931- 


6552. 172233 
oe Zepingimectinas 

cabinet. Single room compact 
furnace, brand new, never used. 
Hospital; bed, excellent condt. 
452-0594... 17223 


»5-PC. DINETTE SET, like new, 
$125. 2 avocado leather living 
room $40. 2 captain 
{Early ‘American chairs, $30. 
Garage Woor opener, §75.. Call 
931-5199. 
FIREWQOD for 1». $35. 
Piskupyieuck load. Call 876- 
5 1732 


individual with outgoing p 
sonality and some college. 
Salary $8400. Mr. Davis. 


DATA PROCESSING 
MANAGER: Honeywell or IMB. 
Take charge of small but 
growing department of 
manufacturing firm. Fee paid. 
Salary to $20,000. (No contract 
required.) Mr. Davis. 


MECHANICAL DRAFTSMAN: 
Would work in product develop- 
ment. Strong detail background 
}o layout according to 
paid, Salary 14K. Mr. 

Krieshok, 


PLANNER-PROCESSOR: Produ- 
ction control, machine shop 
scheduling, ability to read blue. 
prints, order processing, record 
keeping. Fee paid. Solary 11K. 
Mr. Krieshok. 


BOOKKEEPER: Needed for 
small local firm. Must be 
familiar with double entry and 

ing, also filing, 


ting salary $500. Ms. Goodman. 


MECHANICAL DRAFTSMAN: 
Growing company needs ex- 
perienced person to work in 
product. development. Must 
have good detail background. 
Fee paid. Salary $12,000 and 
up. Mr. Madson. 


PRODUCTION SCHEDULER: 
Knowledg of master 
schedules, liaison with — MFG. 
sales and purchasing, MRP 
systems helpful. Fee paid. 
Sclary $10,500 to $14,700. Mr. 
‘Madson. 


: 451-2140 
All Pos! ore Seeeoe i 


2 (Private Em 


CLERK need experience with 
payroll, $550-$600 fee paid, 
Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 877-4640. 22 223 
ACCOUNT HANDLER ex- 
perienced in perspnal lines, 
salary open fee paid, Granite 
City Private Employment 
Agency, 2023 Edison, call 877- 
4640. 22223 
ORDER CLERE experletie 
processing and expedi 
orders,’ $650-$750 42 fee pal 
Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 877-4640, 22 2.23 


pe 65 
office $600 
paid, Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 877-4640. 22223 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978 Page 34 


[Help Wanted 22 /Felp Wanted 22 


Housewives, Graduates, 
College Students 
EXTRA INCOME 


Our clients. are in need of temporary sinpleyees to 
fill ¢ 


supplement their growing 
we need: | 
Typist 
Receptionist 


Secretary 
Key Punch 


business. To eir needs 


Bookkeeper 
General Office Work 


Call now for personal interview. 
Start earning additional money in your spare time. 
Salary from $2.50 to $4.00 per hour. 


BUSINESS SERVICE SYSTEMS 
3600 NAMEOKI ROAD 
GRANITE CITY, ILLINOIS 


SECRETARY short hand with 

some work experience, $600- 
$650 fee paid,’ Granite City 
Private Employment Agency, 
2023 Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2 23 
SECRETARY good skills with 

experience as secretary, $650- 
$700 fee paid, Granite City 
Private Employment Agency, 
2023 Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2 23 
SECRETARY top typing and 

short hand, $750-$800 fee paid, 
Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, cal] 877-4640. | 22 2.23 


CHEMIST degree plus ex- 

perience in pharmaceutical 
methods, $15,000-$19,000 fee 
paid, Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 87-4640. 22 2.23 
COLLECTOR some experience 

in consumer collection field, 
$500 % fee paid, Granite City 
Private Employment Agency, 
2023 Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2 23 
CLERK 4 years H.S. math with 

good: grade average, $500, 
Granite City Private 
Employment Agency, 2023 
Edison, call 877-4640. 22 2:23 
CLERK experience using 

calculator plus good math 
aptitude, $525, Granite City 
Private Employment Agency, 
2023 Edison, ¢all 877-4640. 22 2 23 


451-166 


C.B. RADIO SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS 
ONE DAY RETURN ON MOST C.B.'s! 


Fully Equipped Test Benches 


Latest Test Equipment 


2325 NAMEOKI RD. 


FURNITURE UPHOLSTE- 

RING and repairing. Large 
selection of materials & vinyls. 
Custom work at reasonable 
rates. Modern Upholstery 87- 
3535. 2841078 


Factory Trained Technicians 


ome 


TERMITE CONTROL— Rats, 

mice, any pest controlled. 
Residential or commercial. 
State licensed. Fully insured. 
Stone Exterminator, call 876- 





RECEPTIONIST: The South- -~ 


western Illinois Area Agency 
On Aging is seeking an in- 
dividual (50 years of age and 
older) to fill the position of 
agency receptionist. The 
responsibilities include light 
filing; answering telephones, 
accurate typing of 50 wpm. 
Must have good appearance and 
personality. Starting salary 
$6,000 per annum. References 
required. Please submit 
resumes in confidence to Ms. 
Nancy C, Silvers, 8787 State 
Street, Suite 107, East St. Louis, 
TIl, 62203, no later than March 3, 
1978. 2232 


TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs 
mature person for short trips 
surrounding Granite Cit 
Contact customers. We trai 
Write D. E. Dick, Pres., 
Southwestern Petroleum, Box 
789, Ft. Worth, Tx. 76101. 
PART-TIME SITTER, evenings 
in my home. Must have own 
transportation. Prefer mature 
person, North High School area. 
Call 931-5181, 22227 
KEY to disc operator 3741-3742. 
Experience required. Con- 
venient downtown St. Louis 
location. Salary commensurate 
with experience. Box 35, c-o 
Press-Record. 22313 


APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR 


_L.P.N.'s, 


NURSE'S AIDES 


Apply in Person Monday thru Friday—9 A.M. to 3 P.M. 


Colonnades Nursing Home 


No. 1 COLONIAL DRIVE—GRANITE CITY, ILL. 
Off West Pontoon Road Between Rte. 3 and Rte. 203 


RELIABLE LADY to set with 

elderly woman. Call 876- 
0939. 22.227 
WE NEED owner operator with 

tandem axel, late model, 
conventional tractor, to haul 
new cars. We offer high pay and 
good fringe benefits. Call 451 
9744 2236 
FULL-TIME SALES 

Representative: Western 
Catholic Union Fraternal 
Insurance (Since 1877) We are 
interested in securing sales 
personnel for the Granite City 
afea. Prior applicable ex- 
perience considered. Salary, 
auto expense, commissions, etc 
For complete details call Steve 
Player, 217-223-9721, or write 
Western Catholic Union, P.O 
Box 410, Quincy, Ill. 62301 
Replies confidential! 2236 


LICENSED SITTER, my home 

day and evening care, full and 
part-time. Call 931-6358 
anytime. 2536 
BABY SITTING wanted: 

Reliable. References, 877- 
1465. 252.27 
INCOME TAX preparation. 

5159 Old Alton Rd., across 
tracks from Mitchell — 797- 
0705. 25223 


TRASH HAULING of any kina. 
Call 876-6957. 25227 


TOM’S PAINTING, interior and 
exterior painting. Free 
estimates. Call 931-6221. 25 2 27 
HOLT & SONS Tree Service. 
Trimming, topping, removal. 
Also shrubbery work. Insured. 
Free estimates. Call 876- 
6957. 25 227 
JOE'S Plumbing Repair— 
Leaky faucets, frozen water 
lines thawed. 876-0878. 253278 
HOME REPAIRING. All types. 
Call Lee, 931-0467. 25 3.30 
WANTE: Guitar and vocal 
students — 931-1289. 25 2 23 


seeded ey 
ARE YOU sick of overweight? 

Join Overeaters Anonymous. 
No fees or dues, Call 877-0552 or 
877-6327 after 6 p.m 26 313 
1S DRINKING causing you a 

problem? AA can help. Call 
877-1821. 26 427 


PREGNANT 
AND DISTRESSED? 


Call 877-1184 


REDUCE safe & fast with 


GoBese tablets & E-Vap 
“water pills’. Mid-Town 
Pharmacy, 26 2 23 





UPHOLSTERY & REPAIR 
work done in my home. Large 
selections of material. Free 
estimates. 877-8844. 
BELL'S Tree 
Dangerous trees. safely 
removed, topping & trimming, 
free estimates. Insured. 
Cheapest in town. 451-1341.25 3 6 
FURNITURE MOVING and 
trash hauling. — Free 
estimates. 877-8844. 2536 


LIGHT HAULING for cash or 

anything of equal value. 
Basements & attics cleaned. 
Free estimate. 877-1661 
anytime. 2532 


JOE'S PLUMBING Repair 
Service: Leaky faucets, 
toilets, vanities, drains 
clogged. New’ water lines 
stalled. For dependable service 
call 876-0878. 252.27 


TREE -AND hedge service. 

Topping, shrubbery trimmed 
and sprayed. Reasonable! 20 
years experience. Insured! 
Free estimates. Call 876- 
6674. 25316 


BROWN’S INSURED Tree 

Service: Trees & shrubbery 
trimmed or removed. Aiso 
shrubbery sprayed. Free 
estimates. Call 345-1948. 25 3.13 
PAINTING— Interior, exterior, 

sprayed on acoustic ceilings, 
parking lot striping, hydro 
pressure cleaning. Bonded. 
fully insured. Call Keck 
Painting & Decorating, 876-2498 
— 931-2842. 25 9 28 


Ee Te pi 


Income Tax Time 
NEW SERVICE 


Have your 1977 income 
tax returns prepared in the 
privacy and convenience of 
your own home. .By ap- 
pointment, or pick up and 
deliver. 

AS LOW AS $5.00 


Call 931-3710 


JOE'S PLUMBING Repair 

Service: Leaky faucets, 
toilets, vanities, drains un- 
clogged. New water lines in- 
stalled. For dependable service 
call 876-0878. 282.27 


DUPLI-PRI 


1035. 28.227 
NT 


PRINTING & DUPLICATION 
1215 MADISON AVENUE 
MADISON, ILLINOIS 62060 
PHONE 877-3443 
HOURS: 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY 
SERVICES AND PRICES TO FIT YOUR NEED 
QUICK PRINT quauiy service WITHIN 24 HOURS 
PLAN AHEAD AND SAVE 


REGULAR PRINTING: 


‘© LOW COST - HIGH QUALITY 
‘© REASONABLE DELIVERY TIME 


FOR ANY PRINTING NEED 


HOUSE SPECIALTY spraying [ 


for: Roaches, waterbugs, 
ants and crawling insects. 
Reasonable rates. Guaranteed. 
Call 876-2369 28330 


WATCH & CLOCK 


REPAIR 
SERVICE 


Most brands including 
Timex . . . plus 
IN STORE SERVICE 
W.E. (Wally) SCHROEDER 


wner- Walchmake: 


3667 Nameoki Rd. 


(Across from K-Mart) 


PHONE 452-5260 
HOURS: Mop. thru Set. 
9:30 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. 
Sun. Noon to 5 P.M. 


SAVE 20% ON ALL REPAIRS 
BANDS - CRYSTALS 
BATTERIES 


use YOUR QE masteRcharce 


TAXES PREPARED— Federal 

& all states, accurate and 
efficient. Reasonable rates, for 
appointment. Call 875-5785 
Fairmont. 28.413 


Our 21st Year 
We Stop Leaks 


Quad-City 
Roofing Co. 


OLD ROOFS REPAIRED 
NEW ROOFS APPLIED 


‘net 877-0845 


NIGHT 
Over 9,000 Satisfied Customers 
JOHN JANCO JR. 
CAROL L. PARTNEY 
JOHN JANCO III 
800 State St. 
Madison, Ill. 


SEWING MACHINE Service: 

Sales, rentals. All makes and 
types. 24 years experience. Big 
John Montgomery, 2612 E 
25th. 28 3 30 


Happy Day 
Child Care Center 
877-0888 


LEO’S Home Repairs— 
Plumbing, electrical wiring, 
carpentry. Also installing 
fireplaces. Call 451-9817 or 1-288- 
9005. 


877-2181 


— deposit, 


| 7600. 


HOWARD’S 


HOME IMPROVEMENT 


Residential» Commercial 


New Construction and 
Remodeling - Paneling 
Ceilings - Carpeting 
Soffit - Siding - Roofs 


BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE 
931-2198 or 877-2001 


AVERAGE LIVING, dining 
room, hall cleaned, $34.95. 
Furniture cleaning. Superior 
cleaning Service, 931-1420. 28 3 2 


f 
ED's 
HEATING and 

AIR CONDITIONING 


Repair Service and | 
Installation 
24 Hour Service 


Refrigerators - Major Appliances 








WELDING, BURNING, por- 

table Go anywhere, 
reasonable rates. Thaw frozen 
water lines, Ph. 877-6743. 28 2 27 


REESE 


CONVALESCENT AIDES 
SURGICAL SUPPLIES 


Locoted at 
Community Medical Arts Bldg. 


Sales & Rental 
‘Sick Room Needs - Hospital Needs 


Call 877-7588 


RENTAL PURCHASE— New & 
reconditioned colored TV's 

and stereos, $10 and up. No 
no credit, no main- 
Bert’s TV, 1910 

(Formerly Schermer 
Store.) Call 877- 
30 2 23 


tenance 
Delmar. 
Men's 


DITTRICH 
REMODELING 


Quality Workmanship 
All Type Remodeling 
and Room Addition 


PHONE 451-9234 


28316 ~ 


Led POE 
LL Nee aoe Lo) AT 
LARGE APPLIANCES 
Un aA 

eR Ye 74u Ua 
JOE'S Plumbing Repair— 


Leaky faucets, frozen water 
lines thawed. 876-0878. 28 3 278 


"T" SHIRT 
TRANSFERS 
Pick Your Own... 
NUMBERS and 
LETTERS 


at the AllNew 


SHOP OF SHIRTS. 
26th & Grand, Granite City 


Next to Schewe's Confectionery 
HOURS: THURS., FRI, 9:20 Ti 6:30 
SATURDAY 17 NOON TIL 4PM 


@ 931-5511 


INSULATION 
BLOWN CELLULOSE HIGHEST R RATING 


LOWEST IN COST, FHA AND VA APPROVED, 
FIRE AND INSECT RESISTANT 


s 800 sq. ft. $s] 7O Eciuneiss 


@ we insucare MOBILE HOMES~ONE DAY SERVICE 


MEL'S INSULATION 


931-0325 


SCOCCOOSOCOCCOCOCCOS. 


TUCKPOINTING, spot or whole 

walls. Chimney repair. Free 
estimate. 877-1661 
anytime, 28 32 


BYRON’S 


BOOKKEEPING 
SERVICE 


SINCE 1954 


510 E. CHAIN OF ROCKS RD. 
MITCHELL, ILL. 


931-0232 


AUTO LICENSE SERVICE: 
Judd. 2776 Madison 
Ave. 28 8 28tf 


Budget T.V. 


and Stereo Repair 


Service on all makes 
and models of T.V.'s, 
Audio, C.B.'s and More 


Phone 877-8768 or 877-8769 


or Bring Your Set In at 
1417 21st Street 
and Save 10% to 50% 


9A.M. till 9 P.M. WEEKDAYS 
9A.M. til 6 P.M. SATURDAY 


| 6226. 


F.C.C. 
LICENSED 
DEALER 
RATES 
AVAILABLE 


GRANITE CITY, ILL. 


TAX RETURNS 


Contidential, Fast 
° 

Personal Service 
Since 1956 


Buenger Accounting 
and.Tax Service 


2233!Pontoon Road 
797-0811 


CALL Marshall Brooks to 

refinisl, your _ present 
cabinets. }Old cabinets made 
new. Savé several dollars. Call 
877-0221 afiytime! 2839 


WEST: 


FAST, LOW COST REPAIRS 


LL WORK GUARANTEED 
“SLARRY'S 
TiM. SERVICE 


931-5858 


SEWING 4ND alterations. Call 
28227 


OWNER 


T&C Ariswering Service 
OUR NEW ANSWERING NUMBER IS 
877-3906 


(Formerly 877-1820) 
Myrtle Roberts - Owner 


ADVANCED PIANIST. will 
teach on Saturdays. Call 931- 
28 227 


VIRGIL'S 
Air Condivioning & Heating 
SALES, SERVICE 
AND INSTALLATION 
FREE ESTIMATES 
876-6458 or 877-0607 


BUILT-IN CABINETS: Call 

Marshall Brooks, ‘the only 
cabinet maker listed in the 
Yellow Pagés."" 33 years ex- 
perience. Complete kitchen & 
bath remodeling professionally 
done, Estimates, terms. Cail 
877-0221 anytime! 2839 


Home Repair 
NO JOB \TOO SMALL 


PLUMBING 


JIM’S HOME REPAIRS 


931-4245 


INCOME TAX Service. Ivan 
Harrison and associates, 2562 
Cleveland. Telephone 877-2880 
(Tax practitioner since 1937) 
accurate, || dependable, 
reasonable. 28 3.16 


ae PST d hid 
OW rete Oe 
eee ee ee 


stalled, pressure injection, etc. 
Sey Mead 


oT te eT) 


@ Lost and Found ri] 


LOST— Small Pekengrese 
puppy, femtale, 1-yr. Cut 
under left eye./ Belongs to 5-yr 
old child. Please call 877- 
1311 29223 


LOST— Black kitten, Stratford. 
Lane area. 931-2225. 29 2.27 
LOST— In Pontoon Beach 
Black female Labrador 
Retriever. Reward! Call 931- 
rt 29 223 


LOST: Vicinity of E. 25th Street 

and Kirkpatrick Homes. 
Friendly female German 
Shepherd, black with tan spots. 
Answers name pf “Girl” needs 
medication. Reward! Call 452- 
2478 or 876-4186. 29227 


CRE OF ae on 


proposed petition for an area 
bulk variance ‘of zoning or- 
dinance: Noticelis hereby given 
to all parties concerned, that 
pursuant to Arti¢le VIII, section 
814 of Ordinante No. 877 of 
Madison, Illinois will hold a 
public hearing /at City Hall, 
Madison, Illinoi3|at the hour of 
6:30 p.m. CST ori the 2ist day of 
March, 1978. At}which meeting 
it will consider aipetition for the 
following described real estate: 
Lot One Hundred Fifty (150) in 
block 6 in the city of Madison, 
County of Madison, state of 
Illinois. This property is also 
known as 1918 Rhodes Street. 
Bobby 
Petitioner. 


Card of Thanks Ey: 


We wish to extend our heartfelt 
thanks and appreciation to 
our many friends, relatives and 
neighbors for their -acts of 
kindness, messages of sym- 
pathy, beautiful floral offerings 
and spiritual bouquets during 
our recent loss of Our Loved 
One, CHARLES A. SPARKS. 
We especially wish to thank 
Father Neuman and Davis 
Funeral Home. 
Sparks Family 
32223 


DESK ASSISTANT: must be 
able to work with public; 
requires ability to type, and 
perform other clerical duties 
including checking materials in 
and out, keeping records, 
locating books, answering the 
telephone, filing and pulling 
catalog cards; experience with 
children highly desirable. 40 
hour week; must be available 
some nights; weekend work 
likely. Successful applicant 
must live within city limits of 
Granite City; apply Mon.-Fri., 
2001 Delma! 3236 

ly of FRANK BEZAN 

SR. wish to extend our 
heartfelt thanks and ap- 
preciation for the acts of kind- 
ness, messages of sympathy. 
Special thanks to Father Ralph 
Scherrer and Sedlack Funeral 
Home. 32223 


eS) Du teteatetat Tas) 33 


In Memory of 
JOHNNIE HOLMAN 
who died February 17, 1969 
and JOEY HOLMAN 
who died March 24, 1975 
One night our boys closed their 
weary eyes, 
To awake at dawn in paradise 
Living memories keep them 
always near and dear. 
Missed always by 
Mom and Dad, 
David, Jeannie, and Kids, 
Mike, Mary, Jaynie and 
Carolyn, 
Aunt Mildred and Aunt Billie 
and all who loved them 
33 223 


In Loving Memory of 
GEORGE W. HUROCY JR. 
who passed away 
February 22, 1975 
Death Is The Gateway 
To Eternal Life 
Death is just another step along 

life's changing way, 

No more than just a gateway to 
a new and better day, 

And parting from our loved ones 
is much easier to bear 

When we know that they are 
waiting for us to join them 

There" 

For it is on the Wings of Death 
that the living soul takes 
flight 

Into the “Promised Land Of 
God’ where there shall be 
“No Night" — 

So death is just a natural thing, 
like the closing of a door, 

As we start upon a journey to a 
new and distant shore— 

And none need make this 
journey undirected or alone, 

For God promised us safe 
passage to this vast and great 
unknown— 

So let your grief be softened and 
yield not to despair, 

You have only placed your 
loved one in the Loving 
Father's care. 

Sadly missed by 
Wife and Son 
33.223 


In Loving Memory of 
My Husband 
PERCY WARD 
February 25, 1975 
To some he may be forgotten, 
To others just a part of the past 
But to one who loved and lost 
him, 
His memory will always last. 
Just a cluster of beautiful 
memories 
Sprayed with millions of tears, 
Wishing God could of spared 
him 
For just a few more years. 
Sadly missed by 
Pearl 
33.2 23 


In Loving Memory of 
PETER PASEK 
February 24, 1977 

The silent nights are lonely, 
There is no golden dawn, 
I have lost my lifes companion, 
A life linked with my own. 
It broke my heart to lose you, 
But you did not go alone, 
For part of me went with you, 
The day God took you home. 
Sadly missed by 
Wife Frances 
33.223 


In Loving Memory of 
AGATHA A, SPARKS 
February 25, 1968 
Sadly missed by 
Sparks Family and Relatives 

33.223 
Tn Loving Memory of 
Our Father 
PETER PASEK, 
February 24, 1977 
Heavy are our hearts today, 
Memory ‘brings you back once 
more, 
‘To the time when you were with 


us 
To the happy days of yore. 
-Sadly miss ~ 
His Children and Families 


Illinois Power has 


coal for 60 days 


Illinois Power Company said 
this week it is reducing electric 
usage in all of its buildings and 
properties to conserve electric 
energy in the face of the 
looming coal shortage. 

Effective Monday, Feb. 20, 
outdoor and indoor lighting 
were reduced to minimum 
requirements by the company. 
Outdoor signs were turned off, 
thermostats were set back, and 
all other conservation measures 
possiblé were applied. 

It is the first step in a plan the 
company has adopted to meet 
coal shortages. Full public 
participation is being requested 
by the company at the same 
time. 


The'company asked that the 
admonition IP. has publicized 
widely over the last several 
years — to “use energy wisely” 
— be reviewed, and that all’ 
customers put into effect new 
electricity-saving measures 
where at all possible. ‘ 


J. M, Williams, manager of 
energy supply for the company, 
estimated that at present Ill. 
Power is operating with a 
potential reserve of coal good 
for about 60 days. 

“We believe our customers, in 
the main, are using energy 
wisely,” Williams said, “but 
additional measures are in 
order, and are requested.” 


GC Stee! pilot will retire 
after 26,000 flying hours 


John W. Wilsdon will retire as 
chief pilot of the Granite City 
Steel Division of National Steel 
Corporation, effective March 1, 
after an unusually varied flying 
career which: began 40 years 
ago when he enrolled at Parks 
Air College. 

Wilsdon has been chief pilot at 
Granite City Steel since 1958 

His career to date totals more 
than 26,000 flying hours and 
covers a broad range of 
assignments. 

After graduation from Parks, 
Wilsdon was a pilot and flight 


instructor with the Air Training 
Command, a pilot with the Air 
Transport Command, a test 
pilot for the Douglas Aircraft 
Company, and a transport pilot 
for Ozark Airlines, Inc. 

He served as vice-president 
and chief pilot of Hunter 
Aviation, a subsidiary of Hunter 
Engineering Co. and the. St 
Louis distributor for the Aero 
Commander corporate aircratt, 
before joining granite City 
Steel ‘ 

Wilsdon plans to return to 
aviation sales after his 
retirement. 


Gordon Pfeiffer, 42, dies 


Gordon L. Pfeiffer, 42, of 
Olathe, Kan., a native of 
Granite City, died at 2 a.m 
Tuesday, a short time after 
arriving by ambulance at the 
Olathe Hospital. 

He had been in ill health with 
a heart ailment for the past 
seven years 


Workshop by 
radio service 


Radio Information Service, 
closed-cireuit broadcasting to 
the blind and handicapped, will 
sponsor a__ broadcasters’ 
workshop Saturday, Feb. 25. 

Located at the National 
Shrine of Our Lady of the 
Snows, 9500 W. Illinois Route 15, 
RIS has asked Alfred Fleish- 
man to conduct the first in a 
series of four workshops for the 
RIS volunteer broadcasters. 

Fleishman, chairman 
emeritus of the Fleishman 
Hillard public relations forum, 
specializes in human com: 
munication and — general 
semantics. 

During World War II, he 
received the Legion of Merit for 
communications work — in 
rehabilitation of combat 
casualties and was later ap- 
pointed special consultant on 
public relations to the secretary 
of Defense. 

Fleishman has authored 
books and articles on public 
relations and communication. 
He currently can be heard 
Sunday mornings on the KMOX- 
FM series, ‘‘Lindenwood 
College of the Air.” 


Mr. Pfeiffer was born and 
reared in Granite City. He 
graduated from Granite City 
High School South and had 
served in the U.S. Air Force. 

Before retiring for health 
reasons, Mr. Pfeiffer was a data 
systems specialist in the Air 
Traffic Controller Division of 
the Federal Aviation Agency. 

He was employed in air 
traffic control at St. Louis 
Municipal Airport before 
transferring to Olathe about 12 
years ago. 

Mr. Pfeiffer was a member of 
the Lutheran Church. 

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. 
Joan (Renaud) Pfeiffer; two 
sons, James and Craig Pfeiffer, 
both at home; two daughte 
Mrs. Ron (Susan) 

Olathe and Miss Nancy Pfeiffer 
at home; a sister, Mrs. Robert 
(Phyllis) Wiggins of Granite 
City: and two grandchildren. 

Funeral services are being 
held at 1 p.m. today at the 
Redeemer Lutheran Church in 
Olathe, with interment also 
there, 


Carrier 


GRANITE 
SHEET METALS 
24-HR. SERVICE 
ON ALL MAKES 


876-3432 
EMERGENCY 
877-5390 


INSTALLATION At 
CLEANING AVAILABLE 


! have a four-word buyers guide 
Which says: ‘‘Shop First 
in Classified” 
That’s where this club was 


waiting 


Till now I use a 


borrowed club 


And must have looked 
like quite a dub, 
Just couldn’t hit a thing! 
But with this club, as 
you can see, 
My game's improved 
tremendously 
Especially my swing! 


0.82 ature’ 
00185 





SCOUTS SWORN IN. During Boy Scout Government Day, 1978, Madison 
Boy Scouts take oath as “city officials.” The oath is administered by Madison City Clerk 
John Bellcoff, left. Scouts in the front row, from left, are Darin St. Ivany, fire chief; 


Kenny Kalka, police chief; Terrence, Haynes, mayor; Kenny Gorline, city clerk, and 


MAYOR FOR A DAY. James Ellis, fourth from left, reviews his duties last 
week as “mayor” of Venice during Boy Scout Government Day. From left are: Carl 
Byrnes, city comptroller; Scout Doug Graham, city clerk; Venice Mayor William “Mike” 


Serving gold 


A pie filled with Pralines 'N 
Cream ice cream, pecan halves 
and chocolate fudge was the 
first. gold medal winner to 
receive a score of 100 percent at 
the 1977 California State Fair in 
Sacramento since 1968. 

The judges selecting the pie 
for its gold medal and 
unanimous score were unaware 
of the company’s name entering 
the pie. It was Baskin-Robbins 
31 Ice Cream and the entry was 
the Ice Cream Turtle Pie. 

Robert Jones, owner-operator 
of Baskin-Robbins 31 Ice Cream 
in American Village Shopping 
Center now is offering the prize 
winning pie at his shop, either 
by the piece or as a whole pie 

“It is really going great and 
seems to have made quite a hit 
with everyone,” Jones said, in 
introducing the pie to several 
friends this week. 

The ice Cream Turtle Pie’ is 
made inside a crisp graham 
cracker crust filled with a rich 
layer of Pralines 'N Cream ice 
cream and an even richer layer 
of chocolate fudge. It is topped 


For Z 


YEAR 'ROUND 
GIFT IDEAS 


and mény other For Sale 
classifications 


GRANITE CITY 


PRESS-RECORD || 


TROY OPRY 


COUNTRY MUSIC 
SHOW 


8:00 P.M. - 10:30 P.M. 


EVERY FRIDAY 
The . 
Troy Opry Gang 


and 
The Harmon Family 
Blue Grass Music 


'‘& Mile East of 1-55 
Troy, Ill. 


ADULTS $2.00 
6-12 $1,00 


medal pie 


with a tortoise design of real 
cream topping, pecan halves 
and a swirl of butterscotch, 
completed with a border of 
chocolate fudge. 

The pie is a worthy successor 
to the unusual Mud Pie, which 
won a gold medal last year for 
Baskin-Robbins. 

The Mud Pie is created of 
. Jamoca Almond Fudge ice 
cream, caramel, fudge sauce, 
whipped cream and almonds in 
@ graham cracker crust. 


Write tor a tree booklet 
“Economics” 
Pueblo. Colorado 81009 


The American Economic System. 
We should all eam more about it. 


BA pute seme menage 

a Tht Newspaper & The Achertnng Coured 

MS er 
° 


LUTHERAN LAYMAN'S LEAGUE . 
ANNUAL SAUSAGE SUPPER 


SERVING 3 TO 7 P.M. FAMILY STYLE 
SUNDAY, MARCH 5th 


CONCORDIA PARISH HALL 


2305 Grand Ave. Carryouts Available 
DONATION: $3 Adults — Children 6-12 $1.50 


CARRY-OUT 
SPECIAL! 
Call 877-7029 
xx 12 Pes. Chicken 3 Pint Salad 
tx Potatoes + Loaf Hot Garlic Bread 


No Chicken Order Too Small 
65, Yoo kpige Feeds 562 
4or5 


— | Plece or 3,000 Pieces!!! 


EVERY WED. & THURS. SPECIAL. 


Authentic Italian Meal 
POLENTA CON SALSICCIA 
BAGNA CAUDA SALAD 


Also Available on Carry-Out 
American Village Shopping Center 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD Page 35 


DIAL-A-PIZZA 
Call 931-3885 


FOR HOT, TASTY PIZZA 
DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR - 
4068 Gaslight Walk Granite City 
TRY US!! 5; 


Tues, thru Thurs., 5-11 — Fri. & Sat., 5-1 AM. — Sun., 5-10 


Thurs., Feb. 23, 1978 


Mekerda, 
(618) 540-0708 


PRESLEY TOURS 


Melt Winter's Chill With A 
SPRING VACATION 


SOUTH OF THE BORDER / 16 Days -Mar. 4 
Mexico City / Monterrey /Tence / Acepuicey 
FLORIDA & GRAND CAYMAN IS. / 14 Days -Mar. 4 
Orlando / Gyoress Gardens / Cayman Island / St. Pete's Beach 
SPRINGTIME DOWN SOUTH / 9 Days—Mar. 18 
Natcher / New Orleans / Biloxi / Mobile 

CARIBBEAN’ CRUISE / 8 Days - Aor. 15 

Sen daun/) Curacao /Cerecus /” Trintaad / Martinique / St 
FLORIDA CAROUSEL / 9 Days- : 
Bianer/ Gyorain Garseeir/ Gut Corse Ma 11 & 18; 
CHERRY BLOSSOM FESTIW “ 
Warmington, OS PME Verne Fwaihiamaeeig Ye APE 
VALLEY OF THE S 

Phosnis / scoceaute F sam Dione yeaye APT G 

elie oe Gee corer: brochure with day-by-day itineraries, or see 


Hoekstra, city treasurer; Chief of Police Donald L. Bridick; Albert Hudzik, city 


comptroller, and Second Ward Alderman Frank Dutko. 


Ebersoldt, Ellis, Scout Scott fire chief, 


Venice. 


MID-AMERICA A THEATRES 
se sae ba 


7:00 8:30 
10:00 — 


FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY i 
“LUST FOR BLOOD" 
“BLOOD MANIACS” - 
“IN THE DEVIL'S GARDEN” 


‘SUN. OPEN 6:00 
Pew aoa 


FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY: 

“REUNION” 
“INTIMATE PLAYMATES” 
“HAPPILY EVER AFTER” 


FRI-SAT. OPEN 6:30 
‘SUN. OPEN 6:00 


P71), rh 


4743776 
Sh. Lowe 


EAST BANK PLAYERS 
PRESENT | 
“EGAD, THE WOMAN 
IN WHITE? 

Thurs. & Fri. Nites-8:15 p.m. 
POLISH HALL 
826 Greenwood, Madison Ill. 


Admission: $3 Adults, $2 Students 
and Senior Citizens 


; 


Every Saturday Night 7:30 P.M. 


AT... | 
HOLY TRINITY HALL 
1245 MADISON-AVE. 
MADISON, ILL. 


d Ralph D. Brawley, chief of police in 


JI 


s sc 
Lindsey's =< 


3305 Nameoki Rd. — Granite City 


NOW SERVING. 


BREAKFAST 


DAILY — 7 A.M. ‘TIL 11 A.M. — DAILY 
CHOOSE FROM A COMPLETE BREAKFAST MENU... 


EVERYDAY : 
A9* 


BISCUITS EVERY 
WEDNESDAY 


GRAVY DAY . 





MON. & TUES. 
6-OZ: SIZE 


GROUND SIRLOIN 
DINNER 


$1.89 


SIRLOIN STRIP 


STEAK DINNER ..., 
FRIDAY 


RIBEYE DINNER 


(CHICKEN HOW AVAILABLE OW FRIDAYS) 
SAT. AND SUN. x ALL DAY 


. ALL YOU CAN EATI 


T-BONE 
STEAK DINNER 


$3.49 
°3.39 





THURSDAY 





(Press-Record Photo! 





POPCORN INTRODUCED 
Popcorn was introduced to 
the English colonists at their 


first Thanksgiving dinner on 
Feb. 22, 1630, by Quadequina, 
brother of Massasoit. 











BROASTED 99 
CHICKEN ..... ie 


TRY OUR NEW sour AND SALAD nak “TPS 
PHONE 452-3050 0 BAR 








Win a Super 
at Long John Silver's 


60 Grand Prizes! Win one of 60 luxurious cruises 
to Nassau and the Bahama Out Islands — a four-day island 
holiday for four aboard Norwegian Caribbean Lines’sm 
Sunward IL. 

Get an entry form at any participating 
Long John Silver's, and find out instantly if you're 
a winner. 


Every Entry Form a Valuable Coupon! 


Even if you don’t win a Grand Prize, every entry 
form is a valuable offer for food or icy cold Seca-Col, 
So come on in. You could win the holiday 
of a lifetime. 

In addition to the cruise, winners receive round-trip airlirre 
transportation to Miami from selected cities, and hotel 
accommodations for two nights in Miami prior to the cruise 
departure. Enter as often as you like. Sweepstakes ends March 
26, 1978. Sweepstakes rules and regulations can be found at 
participating Long John Silver's Seafood Shoppes. 


SEAFOOD 


CROSSROADS PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER 
GRANITE CITY, ILL. = 





GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 
Thurs,. Feb. 23. 1978 Page 36 


Concert by 
BAC chorus 


Choral favorites will be 
performed by the Belleville 
Area College Community 
Chorus at St. Paul's United 


Church of Christ in Belleville on 
Sunday, Feb. 26, at 3 p.m. The 
concert, conducted by A. Dennis 
Sparger, is a part of the 
college’s sixth annual Fine Arts 
Festival, 

Sacred music to be sung by 
the chorus includes selections 
from Handel's ‘‘Messiah,”’ 
Mendelssohn’s ‘‘Elijah,’”’ 
Haydn's “The Creation” and 
Brahms’ “A, German 
Requiem.” 

The second portion of the 
program will include music 
from operettas by Strauss and 
by Gilbert and Sullivan and 
selections from a Rodgers and 
Hammerstein musical. 

From Strauss’ Die Fleder- 
maus, the chorus will sing “It’s 
the Party of the Year,” 
“‘Adele’s Laughing Song”’ 
(featuring soprano Trish 
Kissick) and ‘Ah, Happy Day,” 
(Thomas Sturgess, tenor). 

Songs from Gilbert and 
Sullivan's ‘The Mikado” will be 
““As Someday It May Happen,” 
“A Wand’ring Minstrel, I," 
“Three Little Maids. from 
School Are We,’ ‘Brightly 
Dawns Our Wedding Day”’ and 
“The Flowers that Bloom in the 
Spring.” 

From ‘'The Sound of Music,” 
the chorus will sing “‘The Sound 
of Music,” ‘‘My Favorite 
Things,"’ ‘‘Do-re-mi,’’ and 
“Climb Ev'ry Mountain.” 

Organist for the concert is 
Fern Hieb. Darice Palmier is 
pianist. Admission will be $2.50, 


AUTOMOBILE STOLEN 

The black over red 1967 Ford 
four-door sedan of Robert W 
Rongey, 2704 State St., was 
stolen from the 2500 block of 
State Street, the victint 
discovered at 7:45 p.m. Mon- 
day. 


country skis recently purchased by the. university 


Bigham. 


KEEP 


ANDY MATOESIAN 
AS CIRCUIT JUDGE 


fale for by committeg te keep Andy 
2 Circuit sudge, Dr. Al Trtan}. 


POWER BLACKOUT 
Parts of New York City 
were without electricity for 
two and a half hours in a 
blackout Feb. 20, 1973, which 
affected one million people. 


(Office of Lieutenant 
‘“ Goyernor Dave O'Neal) 
INSULATION ™ } 3)» 
proached by a salesman for a 
prepaid funeral plan, payments 
SAVE FUEL AND MONEY 


weetly basis. Gan you tell me 
INSULATE AGAINST SUMMER HEAT 
AND WINTER COLD 


about this arrangement for 
BLOWN CELLULOSE INSULATION: 


elderly people? 
A. Prepaid funeral plans pose 
Highest "R” Rating—most effective 
Fire Resistant 


elderly consumer problems 
Persons should be aware of 
Insect and Rodent Resistant 
Lowest In Cost 


consumer problems arising out 


of the prepaid funeral device, 
INSULATION COMPANY 


sales of which are concentrated 
upon the low income, usually 
Phone 876-1922 Free Estimates 


minority, persons 

In a recent case, a cemetery 
association sold prepaid funeral 
contracts under which the 
purchaser is to pay ap- 
proximately 60 cents per week 
for the prepaid funeral. 

The gimmick is that the 
contract limits the seller's 
liability to a fixed sum ($200 in 
this case, under a 1958 con- 








BEAUTIFUL BATHROOMS 
begin with 
Schifferdecker 


and a touch 
of your 


imagination 


Once upon a time bathrooms were 
small, bathtubs were white and 
bathing was a spartan ritual. 


° Schifferdecker Bathrooms are 
beautiful, well planned and 
color coordinated. 


© Schifferdecker and you can 
make your bathroom 
Something Special! 


OPEN: MON. & FRI. -9 to 9 
SAT: - 9 t0 4 
TUES., WED., & THURS. - 9 to 5 


During business hours call 235-6200 or 397-2400, or 
after hours use our “Day or Night’ automatic message 
number; 397-2400. 


SCHIFFERDECKER 
ST TETENS - SATHS - sioING 


KITCHENS 
EWN hameats 


747 EAST MAIN - BELLEVILLE, ILLINOIS 


CROSS-COUNTRY OR CROSS-CAMPUS. Staff members from the Office of 
Campus Recreation at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville try out cross- 
is are available to faculty, staff 
and students at the Bubble Gym on the campus. Skiers (front to back) are Ann 
Schonlau, Nancy Schumann, Beth Rietveld, Keith Wadell, John Strubberg and Eldon 


Sr. hot line—Avoid 
prepaid funeral plan 


tract), while the purchaser pays 
until the day of death, Such an 
arrangement contains more 
than a whisper of deception 

Q. What are. some of the 
problems to be aware of on 
prepaid funeral contracts? 

A. Some contracts are writteg 
so that the deceased must be 
buried at a specified place 

If an individual, who has fully 
paid for the funeral, per- 
manently moves from the state 
or vicinity where the services 
are offered, upon death the 
survivors have the option of 
forfeiting the money paid in or 
making costly arrangements 
for a funeral many miles away. 

While the prepaid funeral 
contract may provide for in- 
terest paid upon the amounts 
paid in, the rate of interest 
might be much lower than the 
going rate, and the interest may 
not be payable until the entire 
contract amount has been paid 

For example, one standard 
contract provides for interest of 
theee percent per annum, but 


only beginning when the full ~ 


contract amount is paid in, in 
installments during a period of 
two, three or four years. 

Finally, while the prepaid 
contract enables the purchaser 
to select the type of funeral 
desired, in terms of coffin style, 
flowers or no _ flowers, 
limousines, music at the ser- 
vice, etc., there is charac- 
teristically no guarantee that 
the specific service will be 
provided. 

If the selected services have 
increased in price, the seller 
need furnish only those services 
the amount paid in will cover 
under prevailing prices at the 
time of death. 

The various problems with 
prepaid funeral contracts are 
often disguised through clever 
salesmanship or otber devices... 

In point of fact, most if not all 
people who sign up for the 
prepaid funeral contract, would 
do much better putting the 
same amount into. a savings 
account, thereby achieving 
flexibility and a realistic rate of 
interest. 


STAMPS COILED 
U.S. postage stamps were 
issued for the first time in 
coils on Feb, 18, 1908. 


LENNOX: 


Heating Systems 
Sales & Service 
from the 
Comfort Specialists 
COMFORT 


AIR CONDITIONING 


and HEATING, Inc. 
876-2626 
28 HOUR SERVIC! 


House damaged; 


Two boys, abou 13 or 14 years 
old, were seen clitnbing out of a 
home at 2714 Buxton Ave., 
Monday and if later was 
discovered the itterior of the 
house had been dimaged. 

William Herbert, 2219 Delmar 
Ave., who owns the home, said a 
light fixture had: been pulled 
from the ceiling, pulling a 
suspended ceiling: to the floor. 

Entry was \igained by 
removing panels ¢f glass from’ 
the basement Window and 
forcing a screen if, One or both 
youths then climbéd through the 
window to enter. | 

A neighbor noti¢ed suspicious 
activities and said one youth 
was pulling another out of the 
basement , window, Both ran 
east in the alley. |: 

The boy. seeri climbing 
through the winddw was about 
five feet, one itch tall, of 
medium build and wearing a 


2 boys sought 


dark stocking cap. The other 
was slightly taller and wore a 
red stocking cap and long red 
scarf. * 

The $30 light fixture which 
was pulled from the ceiling is 
the only thing known missing. 


DISCHARGE ORDERED 
Robert Bloomfield, 1911 
Grand Ave., Apt. 1,/has been 
sentenced to serve two years of 
conditional discharge (un- 
supervised probation) afte~ 
pleading guilty to aggravated 
battery. He was sentenced by 
Circuit Judge Harold R. Clark 
in connection with the stabbing 
of Vernon Collins Aug. 29, 1977. 


EXPERT APPRAISING 
MORRISS REALTY CO. 
876-4400 


Mrs. Rosie Baker, 59, dies 


Mrs. Rosie (Knock) Baker, 
59, of 1432 Sixth St., Madison, 
died at 4:07 p.m. Monday at 
Oliver Anderson Hospital, 
Maryville, where she had been 
a patient for six days. 

She was born in Munich, 
Germany, and had resided in 
this area '30 years. 


Cap and Millers Workers 
Union 17, and a Granite City 
Senior Citizen Club. 

Survivors include one son, 
John Auer of St. Louis County, 
her mother, Mrs. Maria Knock] 
of Germany; and three grand- 
children. 

Funeral arrangements are 
given in the obituary column. 


Mrs. Baker was employed as 
a machine operator for five 
years at the Classis Hat and Cap 
Co. of St. Louis, She was a 
member of the United Hatters 


UNDERCOATING— 
RALPH’S TEXACO 
22ND & MADISON AVF 


INCOME TAX PREPARATION 


BY COMPUTER1N OUR OFFICE 


B & K BOOKKEEPING 


FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 876-1454 


or Stop In at 2914 Nameoki Road 
Hours 9 to 9 Mon, thru Fri. — 9 to 5 Sat. and Sun. 














“(Radie sShaek) 




















Big reductions on four of 


“tnost wanted products | : 


ou 


TAPE-PHONO-RADIO 
HOME MUSIC CENTER 


’ by Realistic” 





a ” 
TEENA 









































The compléte entertainment system at 
a super-sa¥ving 23% off! AM-FM stereo. 


Stereo cas$ette recorder deck. Two 2- 
way speakér systems. 3-speed chang- 


er, dust Cover 


Clarinette-98 
13-1198 


Reg. 259° 


SMOKE ALARM BARGAIN 


by Archer® = 


Protect your family and property. Radio 
Shack’s top quality smoke alarm continu 
ously stands guard. No AC required, oper 
ates on inéluded battery up to a year 


SLIDE-RULE CALCULATOR 


by Radio Shack ® 


4-kKey memory, big blue display! 
Squares, percents, reciprocals. 


CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) 


OUR BEST MOBILE CB 


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The winter of’ 78 should have convinced you 
that CB is essential! Now get the best for less! 


40 SHACK HAS OVER 56 YEARS EXPERIENCE (N ELECTRONICS! | 


IRECTORY WHITE PAGES FOR THE RADIO SHACK NEAREST You. 


CROSS! OADS PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER. 


‘GRANITE CITY, ILL. 


ni OF TANDY CORPORATION 


Look for this 


signin. your 
neighborhood 





HAZARDOUS RUTS across the right lane of the westbound 
approach of the Broadway viaduct have confronted motorists in Venice. 
The right front tire of the pickup truck is seen Thursday dipping down into 
the worst of two ruts which stretch across the entire lane. The ruts are due 


INSULATION 


We will show you how to save money and fuel. 
Insulate NOW against this winter's cold and 
next summer's heat! 


vx FREE ESTIMATES 3x- 


yr lowest in cost’ 

yx Most efficient 

% Our material meet all FHA requirements 

yx No Down Payment—Low Monthly Payments 


COMFORT AIR CONDITIONING AND 


HEATING—INSULATION DIVISION 
876-2626 931-3535. 


COUPON 
WORTH $10 ON ANY INSULATION 
ORDER PLACED BY FEBRUARY 28 
Name 
Address 


$800 in tools, 


jacks stolen 


Tools and jacks valued at 
more than $800 were stolen from 
the utility truck of George 
Edwards, 4704 Kirkpatrick 
Homes, parked in the 4800 block 
of Kirkpatrick homes between 7 
and 8:30 p.m. Monday. 

A latch was pried from the 
body of the truck to force open 
the door to the exterior tool 
compartment. 

Taken were a large tool box 
containing about $600 worth of 
tools, which would have 
required two men to lift, 
another tool box and tools and 
two jacks. The name Steve 
Edwards is engraved on the 
tools, police were told. 


POWER OVERRIDES 

The Supreme Court, on 
Feb. 23, 1903, ruled that the 
police power of the federal 
government overrode that of 
the states. 


Special Depositor Prices 
on China and Stoneware 


Deposit $50 or more in a new or existing account, 
and buy this 4-piece place setting for only $4.95 


A full range of accessory prices in both china 
and stoneware is also available at greatly 
reduced prices with additional deposits 

of $50 or more. Come in and see our display. 
There's everything from soup bowls 

to chop plates — gravy boats to covered 
oven casseroles. And all are at 

special depositor prices. 


© Offer good at both locations. 


© Interest credited to account does not 
constitute qualifying deposit. 


MADISON COUNTY 
_JSederal savincs 


3600 Nameoki Rd., Granite city 
Phone: 876-3800 or 451-9477 

Route 159 at Cottonwood Station Rd.; Glen Carbon 
Phone: 565-3210 of 345-6550 


SON ; 
«on! Olay 


in part to the ice and snow which have plagued the local area this wittter, 
and the frequent use of road salt during the severe weather. Repair work 
has since been carried out 


(Prese-Recont Photo) 


One hurt in car-train crash 


Alberto Dominquez, 26, 
Bronx, N.¥., was injured when 
his auto was struck by a coal 
car on a Granite City Steel train 
at the Edwardsville Road rail 
crossing at 1:40 a.m. Tuesday 

Dominquez and a witness told 
police the warning lights were 
not operating when the accident 
occurred. They were operating, 
however, when police arrived. 
Dominquez said a man at the 
crossing waved a flare and then 
threw it in the roadway, but he 
was unable to stop his car 
before impact. 

The coal car at the rear of the 
train, which was backing up, 
pushed Dominquez’ auto about 
75 feet, hitting a terminal box 
and knocking it partially off its 
base. - 

Dominquez suffered visible 
injuries, but declined to be 
taken to the hospital. His car 


Concert tonight 
at Madison High 


A clarinet choir and wood- 
wind quartet will highlight the 
Madison High School Concert 
Band’s second public per- 
formance of the 1977-78 season 
at 8 o’clock tonight in the high 
school auditorium. 

Members of the Madison 
Band Parents Club are assisting 
with arrangements for the 
concert, which will be under the 
direction of William F. Led- 
better, band director. 

Admission is by season ticket 
or single admission seats may 
be purchased at the door, 
costing 75 cents for adults and 
50 cents for students. 


Matthew 19:26 ™. 
ALL things are possi 


How precious are the blessing 
of God! Every time | see 
someone: saved or healed or 
delivered from a broken or 
wrecked life, I rejoice. 


God's arm is not shortened in 
last days! ” able to 
ingly above all that 
in think, according 
to the power that worketh’ in 
us!” If we could but see Him in 
all our circumstances. If we 
dwell less on how sick or how 
afflicted or how lost someone 
may be, but dwell only upon 
this: That with God all things 
possible! All Things! This 
meons broken homes can be 
mended, rebellious children can 
be filled with love and sum- 
bission. 1: means you can find o 
job to support your family! With 
God all things are possible. 
Why net commit, your 
problems’ to. God right now? 
‘You've done all that you can do 
+. new trust Him, believe that 
With “Him @ll things. cre 
possible. Today. 


WORD of LIFE 
TABERNACLE 


Granite City, tl. 
62040 


was extensively damaged and 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs.. Feb: 23. 1978 Page 37 


Most vision defects treatable © 
if they are discovered early 


By MARY RICHARDS 
Illinois Department of 
Public Health 

Next to the brain, the human 
eye is the most complex organ 
we have. It functions much like 
a camera, but is 
sophisticated than any camera 
ever invented — it can handle 
1.5 illion simultaneous 
messag 

Light striking the cornea is 
focused onto the retina, which is 
similar to the film in a camera 
except that it is much more 
efficient. 

The retina then transforms 
the light impulses into an 
electrical impulse. This impulse 
is transmitted by the optic 
nerve to the portion of the brain 
called the visual cortex. 

The visual cortex sorts out 
and identifies what we are 
seeing. 

Seven million tiny cones line 
the retina. They separate light 
into the primary colors, and 
then mix these colors into one or 
more of the hundreds of hues on 
the color spectrum. ‘ 

While all this is happening, 
the pupil of the eye regulates 
light by constricting in bright 
light and enlarging in darkness. 

The whole process takes 
about a millionth of a second. 

Many things can go wrong in 
this sophisticated process, 
however, and often do. In fact, 
state public health experts 
estimate that one out of every 


PAPER HANGING 


Vinyl Coverings - Flocks 
Foils - Murals - Painting 


the stepladder and coupling | Call John Lemmon 


arm on the coal car 3 w 


damaged. 


— 


Phone 452-1678 


more’ 


four Illinois children has some 
type of vision defect. 

Sometimes these defects may 
indicate the beginning of even 
more serious vision problems as 
the child grows older. 

What is encouraging, 
however, is that public health 
‘experts also tell us that 92 
percent of vision defects are 
treatable if discovered earlv. 

In an effort to detect visual 
defects early in life, the Illinois 
Department of Public Health 
administers a vision screening 
program which reaches over a 


million-and-a-half children each. 


year. : 

Last, year, more than 90,000 
children were referred to eye 
doctors as a result of this 
testing. 

Vision . screening tests for 
Illinois school-age children are 
mandated by a state law con- 
tained in the School Code. 

In order to fulfill the 
requirements of this law, the 
Illinois Department of Public 
Health trains persons to con- 
duct the vision tests. Since the 
law was passed in 1971, the 
program has grown each year 
and, today, nearly 2,000 persons 
have been trained and certified 
to do vision screening in Illinois 


schools. : 

Since 1968, the state health 
department also has been ad- 
ministering a vision screening 
program for pre-schoolers. 

This. program is designed 
primarily to detect cases of 
amblyopia before the blinding 
condition becomes untreatable.: 
More than 100,000 pre-schoolers 
were screened last year, and: 
nearly 2,500 of them were 
referred to eye doctors. 

The vision screening 
programs do not provide 
examination or treatment. 
Their purpose is to identify 
those children’ who ‘need an eye: 
exam by an-eye doctor. 

If your child has a_ vision: 
screening test, and the 
screening shows a need: for a‘ 
complete examination, be sure: 
to take your child to an eye 
doctor. 

A child's sight is a precious’ 
possession. If it is not cared for: 
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Page 38 
34 


GRANITE. CITY PRESS-RECORD —Thurs., Feb. 23, 1978 
Lid Liksin rons __34@ Public Notice 


PRIMARY ELECTION NOTICE 
Notice Is Hereby Given That On 
TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1978 
_ At The Usual Polling Places In The Various Precincts 
Precinct No. Township Polling Place 
No. 1—Helvetia—Eyangelical Church of Christ (South end of 
Church), 2406 Poplar, Highland. 
No. 2—Helvetia—Evangelical Church of Christ (West entrance 
to Church), 2406 Poplar, Highland. 
No. 3—Helvetia—Weinheimer Bldg., Offices, 1100 Main St, 
Highland. 
No, 4~Helvetia—American Legion Home, Rt: 160, Highland. 
No. \ 5—Helvetia—Evangelical Church of Christ (next to Main 
entrance), 2406 Poplar, Highland. 
No. 1—Saline—Genteman Chevrolet, Junction Rts. 40 and 143, 
Highland. 
No, 2—Saline—Evangelical United Church. of Christ Hall, 
Grantfork.. 
No. 3—Saline—Former Luber Grocery, 1212 6th St., Highland. 
1—Leef—Fire Station, Grantfork. 
i—New Douglas—New Douglas Town Office, New Douglas. 
1—St. Jacob—Community Building, St. Jacob. 
1—Marine—Community Center, N. Windmill, Marine. 
1—Alhambra—ATA Hall, College St., Alhambra. 
1—Olive—Town Hall, Livingston. 
2—Olive—Villagé Hall, Williamson. 
1—Jarvis—Cith Hall, 116 E. Market, Troy. 
2—Jarvis—American Legion Hall, 103 N. Main St., Troy. 
3—Jarvis—Jaycees Hall, 110 S. Main, Troy. 
4—Jarvis—St. Jerome's Hall, 507 S. Main, Troy. 
. 1—Pin Oak—Howard Knecht residence garage, R.R. No. 3, 
Box 47, Edwardsville. 
No.. 1—Hamel—Hamel Community Building, Hamel. 
No. 1—Omphghent—City Hall, Council Room, Worden. 
No. 2—Omphghent—Firemen’s Hall, Prairietown. 
No. 1—Collinsville—Knights of Columbus Hall, 526 Vandalia, 
Collinsville. = 
No, 2—Collinsville—Catholic Community Center, 313 Vandalia, 
Collinsville. 
No» 3—Collinsville—Unit 10 Administration Building (Formerly 
old Post Office) 201 W. Clay, Collinsville. 
No._ 4—Collinsville—Collinsville Tepee, 716 W. Main St., 
Collinsville. 
No. 5—Collinsville—Dalton Auto Body, 406 St. 
Collinsville. 
No. 6—Collinsville—Fairmont Hotel, 326 W. Main St., Collin- 
sville. 
No. 7—Collinsville—Collinsville Fire Dept., 
Collinsville, 
No. 8—Collinsville—-McMackin Buick Co., 
Collinsville. 
No. 9%—Collinsville—Maryville Fire House, Donk and Zupan, 
Maryville. 
No, 10—Collinsville—M. G. Downing residence, Rt. 157 and Cedar 
Lane, Collinsville. 
No. 11—Collinsville—Beuckman Ford Agency, 1923 Vandalia, 
Collinsville. 
No. 12—Collinsville—First Baptist Church, 723 St 
Collinsville 
No, 13—Collinsville—Local 309, I.B.E.W. Hall, 2000 Mall, Rte. No. 
157, Collinsville. 
No. 14—Collinsyille—Thaxton Tire Sales, 
Collinsville. 
No. 15—Collinsville—Meadow 
Vandalia, Collinsville. 
No. 16—Collinsville— 


Louis Rd., 


124 S. Center, 


420 E. Main, 


Louis Rd., 


319 W. Main St., 


Heights Baptist Church, 1498 


No. 17—Collinsville—Village of Maryville Administration Bldg., 
520 N. Center, Maryville. 

No. 18—Collinsville—Maryville Fire Hall, Donk and Zupan, 
Maryville 

No. 19—Collinsville—St. Luke's United Methodist Church, 325 W. 
Main, Collinsville 

No. 20—Collinsville—Beuckman Ford Agency, 1823 Vandalia, 
Collinsville. 

No, 21—Collinsville—Collinsville Equipment Company, 1015 Belt 
Line, Collinsville. 

- No. 22—Collinsville—Collinsville Auto Repair, 1150 St. Louis Rd., 
Collinsville. 

No. 1—Edwardsville—Eden Church Educational Bldg., 903 
Second St. (Rear), Edwardsville. 

No. 2—Edwardsville—City Hall, 400 N. Main'St., Edwardsville. 

No. 3—Edwardsville—Cassens & Sons, 121 Hillsboro, Edward- 
sville, 

No. 4~—Edwardsville—Edwardsville Schoo} Dist., Maintenance 
Bldg. (Old Leclaire School), 722 Holy; at Park Place, 
Edwardsville. 

No. 5—Edwardsville—Butler 
Edwardsville. 

No. 6—Edwardsville—Edwardsville Fire Station No. 2, Cor. 
Montclaire and Lindenwood, Edwardsville 

No, 7—Edwardsville—Glen Carbon Fire Hall, Glen Carbon. 

No. 8~—Edwardsville—Lizotte Sheet Metal, 632 W. Schwarz, 
Edwardsville. 

No. 9—Edwardsville—First Federal Savings & Loan 
Association, Community Room, 300 St. Louis St., Edwardsville. 

No. 10—Edwardsville—Madison County Farm Bureau, 900 
Hillsboro (rear), Edwardsville. 

No, 11—Edwardsville—Madison County T. B, Clinic, Troy Rd., 
Edwardsville. 

No. 12—Edwardsville—Eden Church Educational Bldg., 903 
Second St. (rear), Edwardsville. 

No. 13—Edwardsville—New Leclaire School, 801 E. Franklin, 
Edwardsville. 

No. 14—Edwardsville—Knowles Ford, 
Edwardsville. 

No. 15—Edwardsville—Home Nursery, Rt. 157, Edwardsville. 

No. 16—Edwardsville—St. Mary's School, Notre Dame and 

; Madison, Edwardsville. 

*No. 17—Edwardsville—Cottonwood Office, Cottonwood Rd., 

} Edwardsville. 

+ No. 18—Edwardsville—Glen Carbon Fire Hall, Glen Carbon. 

''No. 1—Ft. Russell—Ted Ketcham residence, Wishbone Acres, 
R.R. No. 1, Edwardsville. 

No. 2—Ft. Russell—American Legion Post 214, 429 S. Prairie, 
Bethalto, 

‘No. 3—Ft. Russell—Meadowbrook Fire Dept. 

, No, 4—Ft. Russell—Bethalto City Hall, Bethalto. 

'No. 5—Ft. Russell—Holiday Shores Fire Dept., Holiday Dr., 
Holiday Shores. 

No. 1—Moro+Community Building, Dorsey. 

No. 2—Moro—United-Church of Christ Church School, Midway. 

No. 1—Nameoki—Long Lake Fire Dept., 4113 Pontoon Rd., 
Pontoon Beach. 

No. 2—Nameoki—Temple Baptist Church, 1914 Harris, East 
Madison. 

No. 3—Nameoki—Otis Scholebo residence, 
Granite City. 

No. 4—Nameoki—State Park Community house, 3310 Harvard, 
Collinsville. 

No, 5—Nameoki—William Weathers residence, 2419 Hemlock, 
Granite City. 

No. 6—Nameoki—Bethel Evangelical Free Church, 2450 
Stratford Lane, Granite City. 

No. 7—Nameoki—Nameoki Township Garage, 4250 Highway 
162, Granite City. 

No. 8—Nameoki—Wholesale Carpet Co., 4010 Pontoon Rd., 

» Granite City. 

(No. 9—Nameoki—Pontoon Beach Village Hall, 3939 Lake Dr., 
Pontoon Beach. 

‘No. 10—Nameoki—Pontoon Beach Village Hall, 3939 Lake Dr., 
Pontoon Beach. 

‘No. 11—Nameoki—Maryville Grade School, 4651 Maryville Rd., 
Granite City. 

No. 12—Nameoki—Parkview School,. 3200 Maryville, Granite 
City. ; 

1—Chouteau—Mitchell Water Dist. Office, E. Chain of 
Rocks Rd., Granite City. 

No. 2—Chouteau—South Roxana Fire Hall, Sinclair.Ave., South 
Roxana. 2 

‘No. 3—Chouteau—Civic League Hall, Delmar, Hartford. 
jo. 4—Chouteau—Chouteau Twp. Office, North Thorngate, 
Granite City. 

-No. 5—Chouteau-Operating Engineers Union Hall, Mitchell. 

‘No, 6—Chouteau—Chouteau Twp. Office, North Thorngate, 
Granite‘ City. 

7—Chouteau—Dad’s Club Building, South Roxana. 
1—Wbod River—Roxana Community Center, Roxana. 
2—Wood River—Hartford Fire House, Hartford. 


Chevrolet, 120 W. Vandalia, 


306 W. Vandalia, 


1705 Courtney, 


No. 3—Wood River—New City Hall, 111 N. Wood River Ave., 
Wood River. ~ 

No. 4—Wood River—Lewis & Clark Grade Sehool, 5th-St: and 
Lorena, Wood River. 

No. 5—Wood River—Rudy’s Restaurant, 29 S. 6th St., (cor. 6th 
and Madison), Wood River. 

No. 6—Wood River—Dad’s Club, 14th St,, Wood River. 

No. 7—Wood River—South Side of Round House, Wood River. 

No. 8—Wood River—American Legion, 120 E. Alton Ave., E. 


Alton. 
Bldg. lobby, 


No. 9—Wood River—Municipal 

Shamrock, E. Alton. 
No. 10—Wood River—Municipal Garage, 4th and Playground, E. 
Alton. 


Main and 


< No. 11—Wood River—Community Bldg., E. Alton. 


No. 12—Wood River—Brushy Grove Fire Station (East end), 500 
Linton, Wood River. 

No, 13—Wood River—Rosewood Heights Grade School, 
Rosewood Heights: » 

No. 14—Wood River—Wood River Township Hall, 33 S. 9th St., 
Rosewood Heights. es 

No. 15 Wood er—Cottage Hills Fire House, Cottage Hills. 

No. 16—Wood River—Wilbur Trimpe Jr. High School, 2nd St, 
Bethalto, . é 

No. 17—Wood River—Firehouse, 1313 Stanley Rd., Forest homes. 

No. 18—Wood River—Old City Hall, Bethalto. 

No. 19—Wood River—Rosewood Heights Fire Station, 45 E. 
Airline Dr., Rosewood Heights. 

No. 20—Wood River—Old Niagara Grade School, E. Alton. 

No. 21—Wood River—North Side of Round House, Wood River. 

No. 22—Wood River—Lewis & Clark School, 5th and Lorena, 
Wood River. 

No. 23—Wood River—Brushy Grove Fire Station (West end) 500 
Linton, Wood River. 

No. 24—Wood River—Civic Memorial Airport (Maintenance 
Bldg.), Bethalto Road, East Alton. 

No. 25—Wood River—Bethalto Civic Memorial High School, 
Second St., Bethalto. 

No. 26—Wood River—Wilbur Trimpe Jr. High School, 2nd St., 
Bethalto. . 

No. 27—Wood River—Cottage Hills Fire House, Cottage Hills. 

No. 28—Wood River—Wood River Township Hall, 33 S. 9th St., 
Rasewood Heights. 

No. 29—Wood River—First United Methodist Church, Kent and 
3rd St., (Kent St. entrance), East Alton. 

No, 1—Foster—Town Hall, Fosterburg. 

No. 2—Foster—J. B. Johnson Career Development Center, 4200 
Humbert Road, Alton. 

No, 3—Foster—Stutz-Arena Office, Alton-Fosterburg Rd. 

No. 1—Venice—Parks District Office, 321 Broadway, Venice. 

No. 2—Venice—St. Mark's Church Hall, 6th and Lincoln, Venice. 

No. 3—Venice—Eagle Park Improvement Association, 
Madison. 

No, 4—Venice—1051 Douglas, Madison. 

No, 5—Venice—West Madison Recreation Center, 3rd and 
Washington, Madison, 

No. 6—Venice—Madison Fire Station, 1527 Third St., Madison. 

No. 7—Venice—Library Bldg., 1700 5th St., Madison. 

No. &—Venice—Madison Recreation Center, 7th and Lee, 
Madison. 

No. %—Venice—Holy Trinity Hall, 1247 Madison Ave., Madison. 

No. 10—Venice—Kenneth Justice residence, 2632 Logan, Granite 
City. 

No, ‘ll—Venice—Geo. Sands Bldg., 109 Weaver, Madison. 

No. 1—Granite City—Metro East Sanitary Dist., 1801 Madison 
Ave., Granite City. 

No. 2—Granite City—Metro East Sanitary Dist., 1801 Madison 
Ave., Granite. City. 

No. 3—Granite City—Baran residence, 1212 Granite Ave., 
Granite City. 

No. 4—Granite City—V.F.W. Post 1300, 2044 Washington Ave., 
Granite City. 

No. 5—Granite City—Formerly American Legion Bldg., 24th 
and. Madison, Granite City. 

No. ‘6—Granite City—New Town Hall, 2060 Delmar, Granite 
City. 

No, 7—Granite City—City Inspection Dept., 
Granite City. 

No. 8—Granite City—Logan School, 2400 West 25th St., Granite 
City. 

No. 9—Granite City—E. Sykes residence, 2618 W. 22nd St., 
Granite City. 


2301 Adams, 


No. 10—Granite City—ARF Club, Niedringhaus and Maple, , 


Granite City. 

No. 11—Granite City—M. Pashea Bldg., 2200 E. 24th St., Granite 
City. 

No. 12—Granite City—Shafer Bldg., 2442 E. 24th St., Granite City. 

No. 13—Granite City—Granite City Housing Authority, Kirk- 
patrick Homes, Granite City. 

No. 14—Granite City—Church of Christ, 2882 Washington Ave., 
Granite City. 

No. 15—Granite City—Schewe’s Corner Confectionery, 2550 
Grand, Granite City 

No. 16—Granite City—Sandra Carter residence, 2663 Nameoki 
Drive, Granite City. 

No. 17—Granite-City—Granite City Park Sakting Rink, Benton 
and Oregon, Granite City. 

No. 18—Granite City—Marshall School, Marshall Ave., Granite 
City. 

No. 19~Granite City—St. Margaret Mary School, Leonard Ave., 
Granite City. 

No. 20—Granite City—Charles Miles residence, 1516 Joy, Granite 
City. 

No. 21—Granite City—United Methodist Church, Pontoon Rd. 
and Primrose, Granite City. * 

No. 22—Granite City—Nameoki 
Pontoon Rd., Granite City. 

No. 23—Granite City—Nameoki Recreation Center (Wabash 
entrance), Franklin and Pontoon Road, Granite City. 

No. 24—Granite City—Nameoki Recreation Center (Wabash 
entrance), Franklin and Pontoon Road, Granite City. 

No. 25—Granite City—Lurton Pulley residence, 2221 Nevada,, 
Granite City. 

No, 26—Granite City—Third Baptist Church, 26th and Grand, 
Granite City. 

No. 27—Granite City—Anchorage Homes, 2309 Edwards st., 
Granite City. 

No. 28—Granite City—Wilson School, Wilson Ave., Granite City. 

No. 29—Granite City—Green’s Confectionery, 2500 Denver, 
Granite City. 

No. 30—Granite City— 


Presbyterian Church, 1700 


No. 31—Granite City—Colonial Haven Nursing Home, 3900 
Stearns, Granite City. 

No. 32—Granite.City—Central Christian Church, 2020 Johnson 
Rd., Granite City. 

No. 33—Granite City—Nagy Building, 2400 Benton St., Granite 
City. 

No. 34—Granite City—Hope Lutheran Church, 3715 Wabash, 
Granite City. 

No. 35—Granite City—Granite City Park Skating Rink, Benton 
and Oregon, Granite City. 

No. 36—Granite City—Bert Lyons residence, 2104 Glen Drive, 
Granite City. 

No. 37—Granite City—St. John Lutheran Church, 2001 St. Clair 
Ave., Granite City. 

No. 1—Alton—City Hall, 101 E. 3rd St., Alton. 

No. 2~—Alton—Irving School, 1020 State St., Alton. 

No. 3—Alton—West Jr. High School, 1513 State St., Alton. 

No. 4—Alton—Ursuline Convent, 845 Danforth, Alton. 

No. 5—Alton—Varble Radio & TV Service, 603 West Delmar, 
Alton. 

No. 6—Alton—Firehouse, 1101 Milton Road, Alton. 

No. 7—Alton—West Jr. High School, 1513 State.St., Alton. 

No. 8—Alton—Alton Acres Housing Office, 3116 Acorn, Alton. 

No. 9—Alton—McKinley School, 121 W.,Elm, Alton. 

No. 10—Alton—Mark Twain Schook, 907 Milton Rd., Alton. 

No. 11—Alton—Lincoln School, 1021 Alton St., Alton. 

See St. Presbyterian Church, 504 E. 12th St., 
Alton. 

No. 13—Alton—Eunice Smith School, 2400 Henry St., Alton. 

No. 14All jacombe Plbg. & Heating, 558 E. Broadway, 
Alton, 

No. 15—Alton—Alton Volunteer Emergency Corps, 2400 Bloomer 
Dr., Alton: 

No. 16—Alton—Roland Griffith Law Office, 500 E. 6th St.; Alton. 

Nov De ieee Patrick’s School, 5th & Central (Central ent.); 

ton. 

No. 18—Alton—St. Patrick’s School, 5th and Central (Central 
ent.), Alton. 

No. 19—Alton—Alton American Inc.; 1400 E. Broadway, Alton. 


No.-20—Alton—Abepa Hall, 1850'E, Broadway, “Alton. 


21—Alton—Thomas Jeffeison School, 2603 N. Rodgers, Alton. 

2—Alton—Wm. Haine residence, 1020 Diamond, Alton. 

23—Alton—Bethesda ‘Temple, 1130 Harrison St., Alton. 

24—Alton—Washingtoh Séhool, #29 Milnor, Alton. 

2%—Alton—Haskel House; 1211 Henry, Alton. 

2—Alton—Centyal School, 1045 Tremont, Alton. 

27—Alton—East Junior High School, 1035 Washington, Alton. 

No. 28—Alton—East Junior. School, 1035 Washington, Alton. 

No. 29—Alton—Horace Mann;School, 2708 Edwards St., Alton. 

No. 30—Alton—Firehouse, 2422 College Ave., Alton. 

No. 31—Alton—Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church, 2620 
Amelia, Alton. 2 

No. 32—Alton—Brown Faith #emple, 2603 Main St., Alton. 

No. 33Alton—Dr. Edwin Bufiin residence, 1829 Worden, Alton. 

No. 34—Alton—United Steel ;Workers of America, 2821 E. 
Broadway, Alton. | 

No. 35—Alton—Milton Sehool, #407 Milton Rd., Alton. 

No. 37—Alton—Mark Twain Sthool, 907 Milton Rd., Alton. 

No. 1—Godfrey—Civie Centef, 327 South Avenue, Godfrey. 

No: 2—Godfrey—Church of t, 2860 Buckmaster Lane, 
Alton. z 

No. 3—Godfrey—Evangelical=United Church of Christ, 1212 
Godfrey Beltline, ‘Godfrey. 2 

No. 4—Godfrey—No. 2-Fire Department, Route 100, Godfrey. 

‘North Junior/High School (rear) Godfrey Rd., 


No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 


: 6+Godtrey—Evangelical fJnited Church of Christ, 1212 
Godfrey Beltline, Godfrey. ; 
No. 7—Godfrey—Evangelical 
Godfrey Beltline, Godfrey. 
No. 8~Godfrey—Clifton “Hill School, 2926 West Delmar, God- 


frey: 
No. 9—Godfrey—Godfrey Town Hall, 6810 Gotifrey Kd., God- 
frey. 4 
No. 10—Godfrey—Lewis & ClarkSchool, 6800 Humbert Rd., 
Godfrey. o 
No. 11—Godfrey—Civie Center, 3f! South Avenue, Godfrey. 
No. 12—Godfrey—Clifford, Hand flesidence, 329 Hand Drive, 
a 


nited Church of Christ, 1212 


Godfrey. 
No. 13—Godfrey—J. B. Johnson Mareer Development center 
Vocational School, 4200 Humbert-Road, Alton. 
No. 14—Godfrey—No. 2 Fire Depagtment, Route 100, Godfrey. 
No. 15—Godfrey—Clifton Hill Schdsl, 2926 West Delmar, God- 
frey. ‘ 
No. 16—Godfrey—North Junior High School, Godfrey Road, 
Godfrey. : 
in the County of Madison and State of Ilinois, a Primary Election 
will be held for the purpose of nominating (or electing if so 
specified) candidates for the following offices of the 
REPUBLICAN PARTY and DEMOCRATIC PARTY 
UNITED STATES SENATOR 
GOVERNOR 
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR 
ATTORNEY GENERAL 
SECRETARY OF STATE 
COMPTROLLER 
TREASURER 
REPRESENTATIVES 
Congressional Districts 
STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEEMAN—To Be Elected—20th dnd 
23rd Congressional Districts 
STATE SENATOR—49th, 55th and 96th Legislative Districts 
REPRESENTATIVES in the GENERAL ASSEMBLY—49th, 55th 
and 56th Legislative Districts 
COUNTY CLERK 
COUNTY TREASURER 
SHERIFF 
REGIONAL SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS 
COUNTY BOARD MEMBERS (in counties under township 
organization)—in Districts 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 23 
(2 year term to fill vacancy), 26 and 28 
JUDGES—For Judge of The Circuit Court, Third Judicial Circuit 


in CONGRESS—20th and 23rd 


of.a child 


(to fill vacancy of Hon. John Gitchoff) 
PRECINCT COMMITTEEMAN (one to be elected in each 


precinct) 


A non-partisan election for two members of the Regional 
Board of School Trustees in said County shall also be held 
simultaneously with the PRIMARY ELECTION. 

A Proposition in Foster Precincts 1, 2 and 3—‘Shall the 
Township Board of Trustees of Foster Township be allowed to use 
the powers conferred in Chapter 139, Section 331 through 336, 


known as the “Township Refuse Collection and Disposal Act”, to 
pass an Ordinance to exercise the powers conferred thereunder? 


The polls of sid PRIMARY ELECTION shall be open con- 
tinuously from 6/00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. on Tuesday, March 21, 1978. 
Dated at Edwardsville, Illinois February 15, 1978. 


EVELYN M. BOWLES 


County Clerk of Madison County, Illinois 


‘No. 35 


NOTICE OF 
PUBLIC HEARING 

ON ROAD DISTRICT BUDGET 
Notice is hereby given that a 
Tentative Budget | and 
Appropriation Ordinance for 
Road Purposes of the Twonship 
of Nameoki, in the County of 
Madison, State of Illinois, for 
the fiscal year beginning March 
1, 1978, and ending February 28, 
1979, will be on file and con- 
veniently available to public 
inspection at Nameoki Town- 
ship Office, 4250 Highway 162, 
Granite City, [linois from and 
after 5:00 o’clock p.m., Thur- 

sday, February 23, 1978. 
Notice is further given hereby 
that a public hearing on said 
Budget and Appropriation 
Ordinance will be held at 7:00 
o'clock p.m., Tuesday, March 
28, 1978, at the Township Office 
in this ‘Township of Nameoki 
and that final hearing and 
action on this ordinance will be 
taken at a meeting to be held’at 
Nameoki Township, 4250 High- 
way 162, Granite City, Ill. at the 
regular Township meeting 

immediate! ter. 
JUGLAS TEETOR 
Clerk 
No. 33 34223 


IN THE CIRCUIT COURT 
FOR THE THIRD 
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 
OF ILLINOIS 
MADISON COUNTY 
EDWARDSVILLE, ILLINOIS 
JESSE JAMES COLE & ELLA 

MAE COLE, 
Petitioner. 
vs. 
BRENDA K. KELLEY, BABY 
BOY KELLEY, and ‘ALL 
WHOM IT MAY CONCERN”, 
Defendants. 
No. 78-F-28 
“PUBLICATION 
ADOPTION NOTICE 
The requisite affidavit for 
publication: having been filed, 
notice is given to you 
and each of you ALL WHOM IT 
MAY CONCERN and to whom it 
may concern, that on the 3ist 
day of January, A.D., 1978, 
JESSE JAMES COLE & ELLA 
MAE COLE filed a petition in 
the office of the Clerk of the 
Cireuit Court of Madison 
for the adoption 
BABY BOY 
‘Y’ that summons was 
duly issued, .returnable ac- 
cording to law, and that said 
petition is still pending. 
Now unless you, ‘ALL 
WHOM. If Peet: 


+ any 


A233 


the said Defendant, file your 
answer, or otherwise make your 
-appearance in said cause, held 
in the Courthouse in the City of 
Edwardsville, County — of 
Madison, Illinois, on or before 
March 15, A.D., 1978, default 
may be entered against you at 
time thereafter and a 
decree of adoption entered ‘in 
accordance with the prayer of 
said petition. 
WILLARD V. PORTELL 
Clerk of the Circuit Court 
Madison County, Illinois 
TERRYL W. FRANCIS 
Attorney 
2730 Madison Ave. 
Granite City, Hlinois 
No. 99 3429 16 23 


NOTICE 

Notice is hereby given on the 
pendency of a suit in the Circuit 
Court of Madison County, Third 
Judicial Circuit, Edwardsville, 
Illinois, wherein SHIRLEY 
MARIE LANCE is Petitioner 
and PHILLIP LEE LANCE is 
Respondent, which suit is No. 
78-D-213 in Family Division and 
is for a Dissolution of Marriage. 
The Respondent, PHILLIP 
LEE LANCE is to be served by 
publication. Default may be 
taken on or after March 22, 1978 
in the Courthouse, in Edward- 
sville, Illinois. 

Willard V. Portell 
Clerk of the Circuit Court 
Madison County Courthouse 
Edwardsville, Illinois 
Land of Lincoln Legal 

Assistance Foundation, Inc. 
Attorneys for Plaintiff 
406 Madison Ave. 
Madison, Illinois 
No. 10 34216 23; 32 
CHANGE IN CERTIFICATE 
oF OWNERSHIP OF 
BUSINESS PUBLICATION 
NOTICE: 

Public Notice is hereby given 
that on February 10, A.D. 1978, 
a certificate was filed in the 
Office of the County Clerk of 
Madison County, Illinois, 
concerning the business known 
as FLORAL ORIGINAL located 
at 1419 Niedringhaus, Granite 
City, Illinois, which certificate 
sets forth the following changes 
in the operation thereof: That 
Ron Kelih and Ed Kirby are go 
longer:.doing business ae 
said assumed name. 

Dated this 10th day of 
February, A.D. 1978. 

Evelyn M, Bowles 
County Clerk 
No. 13 M216 23; 32 


MADISON COUNTY 
ZONING ORDINANCE 
BOARD OF APPEALS. 

NOTICE OF PUBLIC 
HEARING ON PROPOSED 
AMENDMENT AND-OR 
CHANGE TO THE MADISON 
COUNTY ZONING OR- 
DINANCE - 1975. : 

Notice is hereby given that 
the above named Board of 
Appeals, established under the 
Madison County Zoning 
Ordinance, will hold a+ Public 
Hearing on the 9th day of 
March, 1978, at the time and 
place as noted below for the 
purpose of hearing testimony 
for and-or against the Proposed 
Change and-or Amendment to 
the Madison County Zoning 
Ordinance - 1975, as previously 
adopted in 1975, which replaced 
Madison County's 1973 
Ordinance. 

At 10:30 a.m. a Public 
Hearing will be held in .the 
County Board Room in the 
basement of the Court House in 
Edwardsville, in Edwardsville 
Township where all interested 
parties may express their views 
concerning the Proposed 
Change and-or Amendment to 
the Madison County Zoning 
Ordinance - 1975 as previously 
adopted in 1975 which replaced 
the Madison County Zoning 
Ordinance of 1973. 

‘Those parties who may wish 
to examine a copy of the 
Proposed Change: and-or 
Amendment. to the Madison 
County Zoning Ordinance - 1975, 
as previously adopted in 1975, 
which replaced the Madison 
County Zoning Ordinance of 
1973, may do so during regular 
business hours at. the County 
Clerks Office of Madison 
County, at the Court House in 
Edwardsville or in the Offices of 
the Madison County Building 
and Zoning Department in the 
basement of the Court House in 
Edwardsville where copies are 
available for public inspection. 

MADISON COUNTY ZONING 

BOARD OF APPEALS 

Per ROY H. FRUIT 

Chairman 

34223 


No. 34 


IN THE CIRCUIT COURT 
FOR THE THIRD JUDICIAL 
CIRCUIT OF ILLINOIS 
MADISON COUNTY 
EDWARDSVILLE, ILLINOIS 

VICKIE LYNN CRAIG & 
VICTOR R. CRAIG 
Petitioner 
ys. No. 78-F-20 
GARY LEE HARRIS & 
BUDDY DEAN HARRIS 
* Defendants 
PUBLICATION 
ADOPTION NOTICE 

The requisite affidavit for 
publication having been filed, 
notice is hereby given yo you 
and each of you ALL WHOM IT 
MAY CONCERN and to whorn it 
may concern, that on the 24th 
day of January A.D. 1978, 
VICKIE LYNN CRAIG & 
VICTOR R. CRAIG filed a 
petition in the office of the Clerk 
of the Circuit Court of Madison 
County, Illinois for the adoption 
of a child named GARY LEE 
HARRIS that summons was 
duly issued, returnable ac- 
cording to law, and that said 
petition is still pending. 

Now unless you, BUDDY 
DEAN HARRIS the said 
Defendant, file your answer, or 
otherwise make your ap- 
pearance in said cause, held in 
the Courthouse in the City of 
Edwardsville, County of 
Madison, Illinois, on or before 
March 22 A.D., 1978, default 
may be entered against you at 
any time thereafter and a 
decree of adoption entered in 
accordance with the prayer of 
said petition. 

WILLARD V. PORTELL 
CLERK OF THE 
CIRCUIT COURT 

MADISON COUNTY, ILLINOIS 
Frank R. Hudak 

ATTORNEY 

1019 Vandalia St. 
Collinsville, [linois 
No. 11 342 1623; 32 


ASSUMED NAME 
PUBLICATION NOTICE 

Public Notice is hereby given 
that on February 6, 1978, a 
certificate was filed in the 
Office of. the County Clerk of 
Madison County, Illinois, set- 
ting forth the names and’ post- 
office addresses of all of the 
Persons owning, conducting and 
transacting the business known 
as NIPPER’S IN AND OUT 
FOOD SHOP, located at 5429 
Maryville Road, Granite City, 
Illinois. 

Dated this 
February, 1978. 
Evelyn M. Bowles 

County Clerk 

342916°° 


6th day of 


No.3 


ASSUMED NAME 
PUBLICATION NOTICE 

Public Notice is hereby given 
that on February 10, 1978, a 
certificate’ was’ filed in the 
Office of the County Clerk of 
Madison County, Illinois, set- 
ting forth the names and post- 
office addresses of all of the 
Persons owning, conducting and. 
transacting the business known. 
as FLOWER GALLERY LTD.,_ 
located at 1419 Niedringhaus, 
Granite City, Ilinois. 
Dated this 10th 

February, 1978. 
Evelyn M. Bowles 

‘Clerk 


day of 


No. 14 342 16 23; 32 


NOTICE 

Notice is hereby sivert ¥e. ig 
pendency of a suit in the Circull 
Court of Madison County, Third 
Judicial Circuit, Edwardsville, 
Illinois, wherein LORETTA 
JOYCE LANGLEY is. 
Petitioner, and JERRY DEAN 
LANGLEY is Respondent, 
which suit is No. 78-D-158 in 
Family Division, and is for a 


. Dissolution of “Marriage. The 


Respondent, JERRY DEAN 
LANGLEY is to be served by 
publication. Default may be 
taken on or after March 13, 1978 
in the Courthouse, in Edward- 
sville, Ilinois, 
WILLARD V. PORTELL 
Clerk of the Cireuit Court 
Madison County Courthouse 
Edwardsville, Illinois 
LAND OF LINCOLN 
Legal Assistance 
Foundation, Inc. 
Attorneys for Plaintiff 
406 Madison Ave. 
Madison, Illinois 


No. 98 34 29 16 23 


SEALED BIDS 

SEALED BIDS wanted by the 
Madison County Parks & 
Recreation Department for one 
(1) new (current model) 9-ton 
Lo-Bed Trailer. 

SPECIFICATIONS & IN- 
STRUCTIONS TO BIDDER are 
available at the Madison County 
Purchasing Department, 103 
Purcell Street, Room 402 and 
the Parks & Recreation 
Department, 333 S. Main St., 
Edwardsville, Tl. 

BID OPENING to be 
Tuesday, March 7, 1978 at 3:30 
p.m. at the Madison County 
Court House, Edwardsville. 

No. 36 34223 
CLAIM NOTICE 
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT 
OF THE 
THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 
MADISON COUNTY, 
PROBATE DIVISION 
IN THE MATTER OF THE 
ESTATE OF BARBARA M 
WOOD, DECEASED. No. 78-P- 
27. 

Notice is given of the death of 
the above. 

Date Letters Were Issued: 
February 21, 1978 

Executrix: Mary Margaret 
Nonn, 1638 Edison, Granite 
City, TM. 62040. 

Attorney: Larry A. Calvo, 
1950 State Street, Granite City. 
Tl. 62040. 

Claims against the estate 
may be filed in the office of the 
Circuit Court, Probate Division, 
County Courtiouse in 
Edwardsville, Ilinois, within 6 
months from date of issuance of 
letters; and any claim not so 
filed is barred as to the estate 
inventoried within that period. 
Also, copies of claims must be 
mailed or delivered to the 
Executrix and to the attorney 

WILLARD V. PORTELL 
Clerk of the Circuit Court. 
By DEE DIMOCK 
Deputy Clerk 


No. 37 34223;329 


CAN YOU ANSWER 
BASIC ECONOMIC 
QUESTIONS LIKE THESE? 
True False 

OC OC (1,)One out of 
five American workers belongs 
to a labor union. 

O O (@2.)Producergof 
goods outnumber producers 
of services in our economy. 

DO O @BY)US.coal 
reserves are the world's largest. 
O OC Inflation 

_ reduces the standard of 
living of people on relatively 
fixed incomes. 

If you found these 
questions tough, your 
Economics Quotient, your 
E.Q., could probably stand 
some improvement. 

A special booklet has 
been prepared to help you 
learn more about what 
makes our American 
Economic System tick. It's 
fact-filled, easy reading and 
free. It's also an easy way to 
raise your E.Q. 

For your copy, write: 
“Economics,’ Pueblo, 
Colorado 81009. 


ANSWERS: Lb l'e 4211 


The American 
mM. 

'We should olll learri more obout i. 

- A em wer. 
Me sa 
AMERICAN ECONOMIC SYS’ 
wi NO. 
AES. 








World economic 
research grants 


Worldwide. competition 
designed to encourage and 
support research on problems 
related to the international 
economic order has been an- 
nounced by the SIUE Office of 
Research and Projects. 

Supported by the Ford 
Foundation, this international 
competition is open to scholars 
at universities and research 
institutions. Deadline for 
submission of proposals is 
March 15. 


Between six and 12 grants will 
be awarded from $400,000 set 
aside by the foundation. 


Suggested areas of research 
include: international tran- 
smission of economic distur- 
bances; organization of the 
world monetary, investment 
and trade systems; relation- 
ships among trade and_in- 
vestment, income distribution 
and economic policy. 


Trends ‘and policies in 
commodity markets; _in- 
ternational resource allocation, 
location of industry and tran. 
sfer of technology; and the 
policies of international 
economic relations. 


Guidelines for making ap- 
plication and additional in- 
formation are available in the 
Office of Research and 
Projects. 





SUPREME OFFICE SUPPLIES officially opened last week as Mayor Paul 


Schuler, fourth from right, cuts a ribbon during a light snow flurry which appears as 
white streaks in the picture. The new firm is at 1808 State St. From the left are Mr. and 
Mrs. Chuck Hasse, Mrs. Betty Young, wife of one co-owner, Mrs. Sophia Young 


Tours nuclear sub 


Leland S. Beedle Sr., 3088 
Wayne Ave., returned home 
during the weekend from a five- 
day visit in Newport News, Va., 
where he was given a personal 








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tour through ‘the nuclear sub- 
marine U.S.S. Los Angeles by 
his son, Navy Commander 
Ralph E. Beedle, formerly of 
Granite City. : 

“It was quite impressive,” 
Beedle said in referring to the 
6900-ton submarine which is the 
latest in the country’s fleet of 
nuclear submarines. 

He said he made the visit last 
week because the ship soon is to 
leave on a mission and that it 
was the only opportunity he 
would have to inspect his son’s 
ship. 

Commander Beedle 
graduated from Granite City 
High School and attended 
Northwestern University before 
entering the U.S. Naval 
Academy at Annapolis, Md. He 
has been in the Navy since 
graduating from Annapolis in 
1962 

He was assigned as com- 
mander of the Los Angeles in 
ceremonies at Newport News 
last October. Hé previously was 
executive officer of the U.S.S. 
Sturgen, also a nuclear sub- 
marine. 


GC student named 
to dean's list 


A total of 515 students have 
been named to the dean's list at 
Valdosta State College for the 
fall quarter, according to Dr. W. 
Ray Cleere, vice president and 
dean of faculties. 


Freshmen and sophomores 
are required to have a 3.3 grade 
point average out of a possible 
4.0, and upperclassmen must 
attain a 3.5 average in order to 
be named to the academic 
honor list. To make the list, a 
student must carry a full 
academic load of 12 hours of 
course work or more. 


On the fall quarter dean’s list 
is Marilyn Denise Hartbarger, 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Kenneth S. Hartbarger of 
Granite City. 



















Sale ends October 31 


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NOW OPEN FRIDAY’S 'TIL 8 P.M. — ASK ABOUT OUR DECORATING SERVICE 


. SHERWIN— WILLIAMS 


3206 Nameoki Rd. — Granite City . 
Village Shopping Center) 









Phone 877-6930 












(partially hidden), Don Young, Mayor Schuler, Edward Reiske of the Tri-Cities Area 





Chamber of Commerce and Mr. and Mrs. William Schreiber. Hasse, Young and 
Schreiber are co-owners and operators of the firm. : 


k 


Language chief problem for 
Indochinese refugees in state 


A team of instructors at 
Southern Illinois University at 
Carbondale is teaching 
Indochinese refugees in 
Southern Illinois the basic skills 
they need to integrate into 
American society and become 
self-supporting. 

“One of the main problems 
involved with some of the 
(Laotian, Cambodian and 
Vietnamese) refugees is that 
they can’t speak English,” said 
Stephen J. Schumacher, head of 
SIUC's Indochinese Develop- 
ment Program. ‘‘And it’s hard 
to get a job if you can’t speak 
the language.” 

That's why the program, 
started last November as a part 
of SIUE'’s Evaluation and 
Developmental Center, was 
created. The center is a part of 
the university's Rehabilitation 
Institute. 

The effort is aimed at 
boosting refugees’ language 
skills to the point where they 
can function and get jobs that 
will provide them with more 
than enough to merely survive, 
Schumacher said. 

Many of the estimated 130 
Indochinese refugees in 
Southern Illinois wash dishes or 
“bus’’ tables; a few others are 
on welfare. 

Schumacher said the 
program is helping them 
prepare for. better jobs. “We 
want to help these people help 
themselves. We want to convert 
them from tax recipients to 
taxpayers.” 

Instructor Saysana Songvilay 
said the refugees are “people 
who have just one disability; 
they can’t speak English. 

“My main objective, 





he 


. said, “is to develop students’ 


vocabularies and 
versational skills.’’ 

Classes meet for 20 hours a 
week at the Center in Car- 
bondale’s city government 
complex on the east side of 
town. Instructors are permitted 
to structure their classes the 
way they see fit. 

Craig Wilson said he divides 
his class sessions into three 
parts 

His students work 
grammar exercises for 
hours at a stretch, and 
read exercises from a 
grade-level primer, ‘ 
House in the Woods." Some 
students are advanced to 
higher-level reading material. 

Finally, Wilson’s students 
spend about 45 minutes of each 
class in role-playing exercises, 
discussing such topics as 
American burial customs, 
marriage and dating. 

During the last part of the 
sessions, the students play 
games that give them practice 
in how to give directions. 

For example, students take 
turns directing each other to the 
nearest bank, police station ahd 
so on. 

In addition, instructors give 
them tips on how to handle 
everyday problems—like how to 
inquire at the grocer’s counter 


con- 


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then 
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WILLIAM B. SHINDEL 
doing business as 


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3818 Nameoki Rd. 
Across from 


877-7107 


CLEMONS AGENCY 














when fhey can’t find what 
they're’shopping for 

And refugees who don’t 
have driver’s licenses can learn 
the “‘rujes of the road’’ through 
the program 

Studgnts can stay in the 
progrdm until they think 
they’ v¢‘learned enough to go out 
and gét jobs. Otherwise, after 
they’vé completed classes, they 
can adivance to job training 
programs, such as those offered 
through the Comprehensive 
Empléyment Training Act. Or 
they thay enroll in school. 

How have refugees reacted to 


the pyogram? 
“W@'ve had no problems with 
motivation,” Songvilay said. , 


“Students are eager to learn.” 
There are about 10 similar 
progitams for refugees in 
Illingis, but the SIUC project is 
“unique because we were able 
to ‘put it together’ by drawing 
from’, various funding sources,” 
Songvilay said. 

The federal government 
recthtly earmarked $10 million 
for ‘educational programs for 
refiigees and part of the funds 
for} the SIUC program— 
$56,803—comes from the 


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Shown above, with the cannonball bed as the 
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strong reassuring look of this bedroom in solid 
Antiqued Pine and specially selected veneers. 


Reg. SALE 
$279.50 $239.50 
$569.50 $479.50 
$169.60 $144.50 

«+. $1,018.50 $849.50 
. $569.60 $479.50 


Shown right, Ethan Allen's Heirloom bed is a 
graceful marriage of spool and spindle, pedi- 
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table provide ample 
organized storage. All in mellow sunny Nutmeg. 


“Mon. & Fri. 9 A.M. ‘Til 


Department of Health, 
Education and Welfare through 
the Illinois Office of Education. 

The Illinois Farmers’ Union 
gave $30,000 and program 
authorities are anticipating a 
$50,668: grant from the Gover- 
nor’s Office on Manpower and 
Human Development. 

The Illinois Department of 
Public Aid provides financial 
assistance to refugees. who 
place their children in child 
care facilities while they attend 
school 

Persons enrolled in the 
program range from 17 to 63 
years of age, but the average is 
Somewhere in the upper 20s. 

The one-year grants sup- 
porting the program will last 
through September, when, 
Schumacher said, he plans to 
apply for renewal. 


AUTO 


INSURANCE 


CALL 
SAM WOLF Realty, Inc. 
877-2345 


GILBERTS 


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OPEN SUNDAYS 1 ‘TIL 5 PM. 










(Prest-Record Photo) 


MARRIAGE LICENSE 

A marriage license has been 
issued in St. Louis to M.E. Yust 
and L.M. Cain, both of Granite 
City. 











°: 

10: 

10 
re 
6: 
7: 








45, 
45 
45 
30 
30 


00 


VS 


OREN GERDES 


Youth & Music 
SUNDAY 








A.M.— Sunday School 
A.M. —Mornjng Worship 
A.M. —Children’s Church 
P.M. —Young Life 

P.M. —Adult Choir 

P.M. —Evening Service 


CHRISTIAN EDUCATION AND DAY CARE 
“A Beka Book Curriculum” 


2 and 3 YEAR 
NURSERY 


















FOR A REFRESHING 
SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE . . . ATTEND 


Tri-City Park Tabernacle 


ASSEMBLY OF GOD. 
Maryville Road and Clark St. 


PARSONAGE.- 797-0661 





AFTER SCHOOL DAY CARE 


AM. TS P.M. 





GRANHE CITY PRESS-RECORD- 
Thurs., Feb. 23,1978 Page 39 


Fewer deaths 
and marriages 
during January 


Births occurring in Madison 
County during January 
decreased only slightly below 
the total of those in January 
1977, according to a vital 
statistics report released by 
County Clerk Evelyn Bowles. 

The report showed a total of 
263 births last month—132 boys 
and 131 girls—compared to 270 
births in January 1977—145 boys 
and 125 girls. There were four 
sets of twins last month, and 
three in January a year ago. 

The number of deaths in- 
creased last month to 230 from a 
total of 183 during a, year ago. 

The number of deaths in- 
creased last month to 230 from a 
total of 183 during January 1977, 

The number of’ marriages 
decreased substantially during 
January thisiyear—a total of 
132—below the total of 158 oc- 
curring in the same month a 
year ago. 


REINHARDT—Realtor 
Sells—BETTER LIVING!! 





CHURCH - 931-4500 


ia 


GORDON NELSON 
Pastor 
TUESDAY 
10:00 A.M. —Women’s Ministries 
P.M. — Royal Rangers 











00 
WEDNESDAY 
7:30 P.M. — Prayer & Share 
7:30 P.M. —Missionettes 


THURSDAY 
7:30 P.M. —Adult Choir 


4 YEAR OLD 
KINDERGARTEN* 




























































































TWIRLER 


GEORGETTE TANKSLEY, who was 


selected first runnerup in the Miss Sweetheart Pageant at 


Madison 


igh School this week. She won seven trophies 


in the pageant, sponsored by Sharold Yount School of 
Baton in Granite City. More than 250 contestants from 


several states participated. 


Takes runnerup honors in pageant 


Georgette Tanksley, 13, 
daughter of Mr, and’ Mrs. 
George Tanksley, 1146 Rhodes 
St., received first  runnerup 
honors in the Miss Sweetheart 
Pageant, sponsored by Sharold 


Shower honors 
Rhonda Hall 


A miscellaneous _ bridal 
shower was given this week at 
St. Peter Evangelical United 
Church of Christ in honor of 
Miss Ronda Hall who will be 
married to Randy Anderson in 
March 

Diana Anderson and Maude 
Chilton served as hostesses. 

‘A blue and white color theme 
was used, with blue and white 
umbrellas as table decorations 
along with blue crocheted roses 
as centerpieces. The gift table 
was decorated with blue net- 
ting, wedding bells and bows. A 
large umbrella was used as the 
centerpiece. 

Games were played and 
prizes were awarded to the 
winners. After the honoree 
opened her gifts, refreshments 
were served to’ the following 
guests, Mrs. Eileen Hall and 
Mrs. Doris, Anderson, mothers 
of the bridal couple, and Zellma 
Skeen, Min Lee, Lela Anderson, 
Eileen Anderson, Marie Wille, 
Anna Metz, Anna May Moore, 
Evelyn Smith, Rosalie Buente, 
Pat Pool, Lucretia Wright, 
Venita Johannpeter, Pearl 
Jones, Glenna Jones, Charlotte 
Jones, Carol Growe, Joyce 
Hayes, Louise Favier, Kay 
Cornelison, Cheryl Knowland, 
Liz Stevens, Debbie Jones, Jan 
Honchak, Tammy Honchak, 
Joyce Jones, Thelma and Carla 
Morris, Connie Sorenson, Joan 
Ryan, ‘Rojena Millsap, Gracie 
Morgan, Wanda | Ogden, 
Imogene Taylor, Lora Vaught. 


KEEP 


ANDY MATOESIAN 
AS CIRCUIT JUDGE 


Paid tor by committee 10 koop Andy 
Wootian ue Clrevit Judge, Dr. al Trianh 
Chairmen = " 


Yount School of Baton, Granite 
City, at Madison High School 
last week. 

About 250 contestants from 
several midwestern states 
participated in the event. 

To achieve the second place 
finish, Georgette accumulated 
points in various segments of 
the paBeant for 13-and-14-year 
old girls, including modeling in 
a long dress and performing a 
fancy strut, twirl and solo 
routines. 

She earned first place wins in 
dance twirling and advanced 
military march, third place in 
advanced basic strut and basic 
solo twirl and fifth place in 
modeling and beginner solo 
twirling. 

‘The Granite City girl has been 
a baton twirling student for four 
years and bas collected a total 
of 93 trophies. 


Bunko-Ettes honor 
Mrs. Julia Portell 


The Bunko-Ettes Club met 
last week in the home of Mrs. 
Ruth Partney, 2600 Missouri 
Ave., for a monthly meeting 
hosted by Mrs. Rose Druhe. 

A gift and decorated cake was 
presented to Mrs. Julie Portell, 
in observance of the birthday. 

Those excelling in the games 
and winning prizes were Mrs. 
Partney, Angie Buehler, Evelyn 
McCollegan, Mrs. Portell and 
May Ebling 

Also present were Mesdames 
Dorothy Barnett, Helen Lip- 
chik, Helen Santagato and 
Leona Delaloye. The next 
meeting will be held March 1 


MR., MRS. JOHN HAUG 
NAME SON JOHN JR. 

Mr. and Mrs. John Haug, 
1814A Delmar Ave., are an- 
nouncing the birth of a-son, born 
Feb. 17 at St. Elizabeth 
Hospital. 

The new arrival has been 
named John Joseph Haug Jr., 
and weighed seven pounds, one 
ounce. 

Mrs. Hang is the former 
Denise Baker, a daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Dennis Baker. 

The paternal grandparents 
are Mr. and Mrs. Al Haug and 
great-grandmothers include Dr. 
Felicia Koch and Mrs. Ruth 
Baker, all of Granite City. 


The Drusilla Andrews 
Chapter of ‘the Daughters of 
American Revolution held its 
annual George Washington Tea 
Sunday” afternoon at the 
Niedringhaus United Methodist 
Church and honored the ‘‘Good 
Citizen” from each of the local 
area high schools and the 
Granite City grade school 
winner of the American History 
essay contest. 

Miss Lisa Sager, the daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. John Sager, and 
a sixth-grade student at Wilson 
School, received a pin award for 
writing the best essay on the 


topic of ‘Growing Up in’ 


Colonial Times.” This essay 
contest, sponsored for the first 
time this year by the local 
chapter, was open to all Granite 
City students in grades 58. 
Lisa’s teacher, Mrs.. Maxine 
Borchers, was present and Mrs. 
JoAnn Burcky, American 
History month chairman, made 
the presentation. 

Senior class students who 
were honored were Ronald 
Backs from Granite City South, 
Miss Tami Boushard from 
Venice High, Carl Camp from 
Madison High, and Miss Jane 
Marshall, Granite City North. 
These students were selected as 
their school representative on 
the qualities of leadership, 
patriotish, dependability, and 
service. Mrs. Eva Meier, 
speaking as she presented the 
certificates and pins to the 
students, reminded the group 
that cooperation is needed 
between the home, the school, 
and the church, or the entire 
community suffers. 

Mrs. Lucille Butler presented 
the afternoon’s program on 
“Music of the Presidents.” She 
was assisted by a guest soloist, 
Mrs. Rogera Mefford, and her 
accompanist, Mrs. Barbara 
Williams. 

Mrs. Mefford sang three 
numbers—‘' Washington's 
Favorite the Brave La 
Fayette,” “The Dead March”, 
which was used at Washington's 
funeral, and “Oh Why Should 
the Spirit of Mortal Be Proud,” 
a poem by Abraham Lincoln 
which has been set to music. 

Mrs. Butler covered all of the 
presidents in her talk and 
commented on how frequently 
the Marine Band was called on 
by many of the presidents to 
provide appropriate music of 
many types. 

Mrs. Janet Wilson, chapter 
regent, welcomed the visitors 


Driisilla Andre ws Chapter. 


” LISA SAGER 


and members and served as th 
mistress of ceremonies. 

Ronald Backs, the son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert Backs and the* 
representative of Granite City. 
High School South, is especially 
interested in sports. He is a 
member of the Lettermen’s: 
Club, the Science Club, and the: 
Social Science Club. Hé 
received special recognition fof? 
his scores on the NEDT test: 
Ron plans to attend thi 
University of Illinois next year: 

Miss Tami Boushard, thi 
Venice High Schoat 
representative, is the daughte? 
of Mr. and Mrs. John Boushard; 
She is especially interested 
piano and organ and is teachi 
her sister and friends to play ths 
piano. She also serves as 
church’s pianist-organist. Sh 
has been president of the 
Student Council and the 
Business Club. She is a co-editat 
of the yearbook. Last summet 
she served as a counselor in th 
Venice Park District's summet 
program for children. Tami ij 
working at St. Elizabeth 
Hospital in the school’s Co-of) 
program as a part-time medical 
transcriptionist. She plans t} 
attend Belleville Area Colleg+ 
in the fall. y 

The representative frorfi 
Madison High School, Carl 
Camp, is the son of Mr. anil 
Mrs. Carl Camp. He is 4 
member of the Student Council 
and the Patrol organization. He 
has received certificates for his 
reading achievement and has 
earned medals in choral cote 
tests. He also has a part-time 
job from which he was unable t® 


Mr., Mrs. Floyd Hatcher : 
mark 35th anniversary + 


Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hatcher, 
2979 Iowa St., were com- 
plimented at a surprise party in 
observance of their 35th wed- 
ding anniversary on Sunday. 

The social event was hosted 
by their children and held in the 
home of a son-in-law and 
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Vic 
Kahn, 1548 Garfield Ave. 
Assisting were the honorees 
sons and daughters-in-law, Mr. 
and Mrs. Ronald Hatcher and 
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hatcher. 

Guests included grand- 
children of the couple, Kim- 
berly, Joshua and Allison Beth 
and Mrs. Maggie Brooks, Mr. 
and Mrs. John Vaughn, Mr. and 
Mrs. Jack Vaughn and Janette, 
Mrs. Ryder, Mr. and Mrs. 
Delbert Hackney, Mr. and Mrs. 
Roy Ferguson and Christina. 


a 
Mrs. Sally Burns, Mr. and 
Mrs. Ray Ashcraft and Angel), 
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ebersoldt, 
Mr. and Mrs. Melton Marti, 
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hadley, 
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kahn aiid 
son Chris, Mr. and Mrs, Henk 
Kahn Sr. # 
Mr. and Mrs. Hatcher were 
married in 1943 at a Methodist 
Church in Maplewood, Mo 
They were presented with mahy 
gifts followed by refreshmefits 
served: by the hosts. 7 


ROTARY CLUB = 

The Rotary Club was 
founded in Chleago, Ill, by 
Paul Percy Harris, Feb. 2, 
1905. t 


honors five area students 


TAMI BOUSHARD 


be excused for the Sunday af- 
ternoon program, 

Granite City North’s 
representative was Miss Jane 
M. Marshall, the daughter of 
Mrs. Rae Marshall. Miss 
Marshall was a representative 
to Illini Girls’ State, a member 
of the homecoming court, and a 
member of the National Honor 
Society. She is a three-year 
member of the G.A.A. and has 
received varsity letters in 
tennis, track and field events, 
and volleyball. Jane is a 
member of the Steelerettes, the 
Silver Spirit Pep Club, and the 
Arts and Crafts Club. She has 
been Student Council treasurer, 
all-sports manager, and an 
assistant editor and editor of the 
yearbook. She has done 
volunteer, work at the 
Immunization Clinic and 
regularly attends the Glenview 
Assembly of God Church. Jane 
is undecided as to where she 
will attend college. 

Guests present were Mr. and 
Mrs. John Boushard, Mr. and 
Mrs. Robert Backs, Mrs. Rae 
Marshall, Mrs. Melva Ornan, 
Mr. and Mrs. John Sager. 
Sherry and LaNae Sager, Mrs. 
Ruth McDonald, Mrs. Mary 
Dake, Wilbur Engelke, . Robert 
Butler, and Robert B. Cowan, 
chairman of the Social Science 
Department at Granite City 
North. 

Additional members present 
were Miss Ella Ray Smith and 
Mesdames Ruth McCarty, 
Emma Schoen, Helen Gant- 
cheff, Margaret Belt, Reva 
Turner, Mamie Frohardt, and 
Georgia Engelke. 


Republican Women 


Mrs. Edna Kohibrecher, 
president of the Granite City 
Republican Women’s Club, 
appointed committee chairmen 
for the 1978 club year at an 
executive board meeting held 
during the weekend at Bill 
Burns Cafeteria. 

After the luncheon the 
president named Brenda Reese 
chairman of the ways and 
means committee; Edna Lynn, 
legislative chairman; | Bethel 
Davis Americanism chairman; 
Elna Hoover, older Americans 
representive; Geneieve 
McComis, world affairs; 
Marionrose: Lambert, com- 
munity service; Judy and Mary 
Nemeth, campaign’ activity; 
and Daisy Reva Turner, hostess 
chairman. 

Final arrangements were 
made for a March 12 buffet to be 
held at 5 p.m. at the Burns 
Cafeteria. The dinner was 
scheduled to introduced can- 
didates for the primary elec- 





Pre-Season Bonus. Offer! 


RONALD BACKS 


JANE MARSHALL 


Mrs. Stephens 
entertains club 


Mrs. Pauline Stephens en- 
tertained the Jolly 12 pinochle 
club, last week at a noon lun- 
cheon and afternoon of card 
games 

Prizes were awarded to Mrs. 
‘Ann Giese, the hostess, Mrs. 
Mildred Robertson and Mrs. 
Mabel Lehne. 

Also attending 
Mesdames Penny Ousley, 
Pauline Canham, Katharyn 
Smithson and a guest Thelma 
Scroggins. The hostess an- 
nounced another member Mrs. 
Emma Steinberg is vacationing 
in Florida. Mrs. Stephens will 
also host the March meeting, it 
was noted. 


name new chairmen 


tion. Tickets costing $3.50 and 
reservations may be made with 
Ruth Lucas by calling 876-6501, 
it was announced. 


Secretary workshop 
set Monday night 


The Granite City Association 
of Educational Secretaries is 
hosting a workshop entitled 
“Give Your Boss a Halo”, 
Monday, Feb. 27, 7:30-9:30 p.m. 
at Parkview School, 3200 
Maryville Road. 

Workshop chairman is 
Catherine Wittevrongel who 
will be assisted by Frieda 
Andrews and Arlene Haldeman. 
Juanita Craycraft, Betty 
Williams and Lucille Caban are 
assisting in the general 
arrangements 

All educational secretaries in 
Madison County have been 
invited to the workshop. 


Parents plan new projects 


The first ‘‘craft-a-month”’ 
session held at Sacred Heart 
School for members of the 
Parent-Teacher Organization 
and parish residents, was the 
topic of discussion at the 
monthly PTO meeting, con- 
ducted by Mrs. Sylvia Zabawa, 
president. 

Attending the initial meeting 
were 14 women who made 
burlap flowers under the 
direction of Mrs. Georgia 
Miller, and will continue the 
project at the March 2 session. 
Mrs. Barbara Walker will in- 
struct a class on macrame at 
the March 16 meeting, ac- 
cording to the president. 


She added all materials are 
furnished and the completed 
articles will be used for the 
annual Winter Carnival. 
Classes are held from 9 a.m.to 
ll a.m. and anyone needing 
transportation are advised to 
call 877-0155, Mrs. Zabawa 
added. 


During the meeting it was 
announced volunteer workers 
are needed for the March 4 
paper drive. Pick-ups will be 
made Monday through Friday 
from 9 to $ p.m. by calling 876- 
1716. 


Members also agreed to 
change the date of the carnival 
from Dee. 8 to Oct. 22 and they 
will select.a new name for the 
fund raising project, at a later 
meeting. 


~~ 


‘The group of parents decided 
to sell gym bags made of nylon 
and vinyl, which were displayed 
at the meeting, as a financial 
event. 

A donation was made for the 
seventh and eighth grade girls, 
who are participating in a 
volleyball tournament with 
other catholic schools. in the 
area. 


Sister Anne de Montfort, 
school principal, reported on a 
meeting of the eighth graders 
and Mrs. Anita McKinney and 
Walter Padgett, counselors at 
South High School. 


The counselors explained the 
procedures in entering high 
school and announced they will 
return to the school on Tuesday, 
Feb. 28, to assist the students in 
planning their courses. 


Father James Hill, church 
pastor, addressed the group 
noting’ the final vote on the 
physical education program is 
being tallied and the results will 
be announced to the parents as 
soon as possible, 


Mrs, Zabawa reported the | 
vice-president, Donna Narup is 
hospitalized. 


The eighth grade class won 
the parent attendance prize. 
Father Hill led the closing 
prayer and refreshments were 
served by the fifth grade room 
mothers. The next meeting is 
set for March 9, * 


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Come in today and choose yours 


I 
Verbbied 
JEWELRY 


AND GIFT SHOP 
“Where Quality and Value Begin” 


1237 Nineteenth 


Phone 451-4759 





Buy energy-saving Bryant 

air conditioning before March 
31 and get this $50 Savings 
Bond for just $1.50 mere. 


Offer applies to any size Bryant 
Model 567C/RCU Quietline air 
conditioner quoted on and pur- 
chased now through March 31 
and installed by April 15. Be- 
sides getting the bond, you'll 
pocket additional savings by 
buying now, during the off- 
season. And you'll save on 
electricity for years to come 
thanks to Bryant's energy- 
saving operating efficiency. 
Call today for a free, no- 
obligation estimate. 


CONSOLIDATION 
is 
y yy 


For a limited time, save on these 
distinguished Pee Gee lamps 
with handsome Rose Garden 
turn-of-the-century styling. Each 
is carefully detailed on hand- 
blown opal glass. The heritage of 
yesterday’s rich craftsmanship 
for today’s contemporary living. 


THREE SIZES: 
18" T $4,975 


Reg. $59.95 +5995 


89995 


Reg. $74.95 


27" Tall 
Reg. $119.95 





CHAIN LAMP 
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Multicolor rose pattern 
painted’ on hand-blown opal 


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GATEWAY LOAN 


1223 MADISON AVE. | PHONE 877-7300 
“HOURS: Monday - Thursddy, 9:00. til 5:00 p.m. 
Friday, 9:00 ’til 6:00; Saturday, 9:00 ‘til 12:00 





COUNT'S 
HEATING & COOLING 


1947 Cleveland Granite City, 
Phone: 452- 


ir ¢ 















































BERT’S AUDIO TV. SHOWROOM 


. 1910 DELMAR FREE PARKING IN. REAR, 
(Formerty Schermer Men Store) i 


-' 877-7600 


OPEN THURSDAY ‘Tit 7.P.M. AND FRIDAY ‘TIL 6 P.M. 





_ CIRCUIT JUDGE 
ANDY MATOESIAN 


’ RETIRED CHIEF CIRCUIT JUDGE 


Fred P. Schuman 
HAS STATED: 


To The Citizens and Voters of 
Madison County, Illinois: 

Judge Andy Matoesian, Circuit Judge of the 
Third Judicial Circuit, Madison County, Illinois, is a 
candidate for Circuit Judge on the Democratic ticket 
in the Primary Election to be held in Madison County, 
Illinois on March 21, 1978. 

He has served with distinction as a Judge for 
many years, and his ability and fairness were 
recognized when he was appointed by the Supreme 
Court of Illinois as a Circuit Judge to fill vacancy 
created by the resignation of Judge John Gitchoff. 

I presided in the same Circuit as a Judge for many 
years in Madison County, Illinois, and served as Chief 
Circuit Judge for about three years until I retired in 
September, 1975. 

I know Judge Matoesian and I know he is the best 
person for the position he seeks. He is a credit to our 
Judicial System and deserves to be nominated. 

Irecommend Judge Matoesian to you, and would 
appreciate your vote and help for him. 


5 


Yours truly, 
FRED P. SCHUMAN 


RETIRED CIRCUIT JUDGE 


Merlin G. Hiscott 
HAS STATED: 


Experience adds to 
ability as judge 


To the Editor: 

After nearly 13 years as an associate judge, I have retired, 
However, my ingerest in the judicial system of Madison County 
remains active. 

I support the candidacy of Judge Andy Matoesian for circuit 
judge. 

ey support for him is based on my personal knowledge of 
Judge Andy Matoesian for nearly 12 years as a fellow associate 
judge. Then, the Supreme Court of Illinois elevated him to the 
cireuit court judgeship. 

Since September, Judge Andy Matoesian has demonstrated his 
ability to remain a circuit judge. 

Judge Matoesian's qualifications — based upon ability, service 
and experience — deserve to be rewarded by voters when they vote 
for circuit judge om March 21, 

Judge Matoesian’s honesty and integrity are unquestioned 
virtues deserving of support. 

‘You get just what you vote for. Each vote is important. Retain 
Judge Andy Matoesian for circuit judge. 

MERLIN G. HISCOTT 


1732 Spring Avenue 


Helen Homan 
RETIREE OF THE CIRCUIT 
CLERK’S OFFICE HAS STATED: 


Judge has outstanding 
legal ability 


To the Editor: 

I was the clerk in the City Court of Granite City — later 
merged into the Circuit Court — for many years. 

Until my recent retirement from public employment, I thought 
it improper to make a statement about Judge Andy Matocsian's 
candidacy. 

For the last 12 years, Andy Matoesian had been an associate 
judge in Madison County and was recently elevated to the position 
of circuit judge to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of 
John Gitchoff. 

He is now a candidate for circuit judge in Madison County. 

I wish to state at this time that the fine traditions of the Circuit 
Court will be continued with the election of Judge Andy Matoesian. 

I have worked with Judge Matoesian for many years and 
believe strongly in him. His legal ability and honesty are 
outstanding, 

I urge all friends and acquaintances to vote for Judge Andy 
Matoesian in the Democratic primary on March 21 


- MOTE | 
MARCH 21, 1978 


Democratic Primary 
FOR JUDGE OF THE CIRCUIT COURT 


ANDY 
MATOESIAN Xd 


Paid for by Committee To Keep Andy Matoesion As Circuit Judge. 
Dr. Albert W. Trianj, Chairman, 52 Oaklawn, Granite City, 
Minots 62040. 


GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


NORTH SPEECH HONORS. Three North High 
School speech students earned honors in a district 


speech contest held at the East Alton-Wood River High 
School. From left, Jon Kastelic who placed first in 
extermpore speaking; Dawn Walker, third in dramatic 


interpretation, and Mark Belleville, third in humorous 


Courses in real estate 


Four real estate courses are 
being offered at SIUE beginning 
in March, as part of the 
university’s continuing 
education programs for 
salesmen and brokers, The 
classes are sponsored by SIUE 
in cooperation with the 
Edwardsville-Collinsville 
Board of Realtors. 

“Basic Transactions in Real 
Estate” will meet Tuesdays 
March 7 through May 23, from 
6:30 until 9:30 p.m. in the 
Illinois Room of the University 
Center. Fee is $72.50. 

Requirements for taking the 
Illinois salesman _ license 
examination will be met upon 
satisfactory completion of the 
course. Topics will include 
concepts of home ownership, 
real estate business, brokerage, 
listing, selling, legal descrip- 
tions and contracts. 

Successful completion of this 
course is a prerequisite for 
enrollment in the following 
three courses. Satisfactory 
completion of any of the 
following three 15-hour 
workshops will apply toward 
the 90-hour requirement for 
taking the Illinois broker 
license examination. 

“Finance” will be taught 
Tuesdays March 7 through 
April 11, from 6:30 until, 9:30 
p.m. in the Mississippi Room of 
the University Center. The fee 
is $60. 

Topics will include mor- 
tgages, deeds of trust, equity, 


BUY. 


terms and release provisions, 
interest usury, waiver of 
redemption, escrows, pledge 
aecounts, contractors and 
contractors’ statements. 
“Advanced Principles” is the 
title for the $60 workshop to be 
offered Wednesdays from 
March 8 through April 12 at 6:30 


until 9:30 p.m. in the Missouri ; 
Room of the University Center. : 
Among session topics will be ; 


listing, title search, drafting, 
broker-salesman relationships, 
salesman-salesman __relation- 
ships, and broker to broker 
relationships 

“Contracts and Con- 
veyances” will be held Thur- 
sdays, March 9 through April 
13, from 6:30 until 9:30 p.m. in 
the Mississippi Room of the 
University Center. The fee is 
$60. 


Class discussion topics will 
include deeds and transfer of 
titles, brokers and managers, 
contracts for sale of land, steps 
in closing a real estate sale, and 
mortgage foreclosure and 
redemption. 

The course fees include all 
materials. Class size is limited 
for all courses, and registration 
will be processed on a first 
come, first-served basis. 


SKOTTY'S 


JEWELRY & CARD SHOP 
1304 Niedringhaus 
876-6414 


FEDDERS 


FURNACE 
THE FURNACE 
WITH A FUTURE 


* Sized for air conditioning 


*Features dependable, evenly 
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FEDDERS GAS FURNACE 
WITH YOUR FEDDERS FURNACE PURCHASE. . . 


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FEDDERS FUEL SAVER 
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SAVES ON HEATING... 


By automatically lowering the temperature 


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Free survey. Gall us now... 
well. get much busier in afew weeks 


COMFORT 


Air Conditio: 


& Hee 


3780 Pontoon Road 
Granite City, Ilineis 62040. 


MR. INDOOR COMFORT 


876-2626 


Since 1967 


- madrigal, 


Thurs.. Feb. 23.1978 Page 42 


interpretation. At the Illinois High School Association 
(IHSA) Sectional Speech contest, Kastelic qualified for 
the #ate speech finals and Belleville won a third-place 
medal. This is the second year in a row that North speech 
and debate students have qualified for ISHA state finals. 


UNDERCOATING— 
RALPH'S TEXACO 
22ND & MADISON AVE. 


Madrigal and 


16th Century > 
meal planned 


Belleville Area College’s first 
“An Elizabethan 
Madrigal Feaste,”’ will be 
performed in the college dining 
room on March 10 and 11 at 7:30 


m 
P The Chamber Choir, directed 
by A. Dennis Sparger, will 
entertain before, during and 
after the 16th Century meal. 

The select ensemble of 20 
adult singers will be in 
costumes suitable to the period. 

Tickets for the madrigal 
dinner will be available by 
advance sale only. They are to 
be ordered before March 3 by 
sending a check for $7.50 each to 
BAC Madrigal Feaste, 353 
Breckenridge Drive, Belleville, 
Til. 62221. All residents of the 
district are being invited to 
attend the event. 


A a 
THESE 


Hurt on Missouri 


Mrs. Patricia Schultz, 36, of 
Kaseberg Park, Pontoon Beach, 
was injured when her south- 
bound auto slowed for another 
car and was struck from the 
rear by the station wagon of 
Clarence Graham, 2914% 
Palmer Ave., on Missouri 
Avenue (old Route 3) west of the 
Granite City Humane Shelter at 
1:20 p.m. Monday. 

Graham was issued -tickéts 
alleging following too closely 
and driving while his driver's 
license was revoked. 

Mrs. Schultz was taken’ by 
Granite City ambulance to St. 
Elizabeth Hospital. where she 
was examined for minor in- 
juries and was released. 


South Stage Band 
to appear tonight 


Granite City High School 
South Stagé Band will perform 
at 8:30 p.m. today in the South 
High cafeteria, immediately 
after the freshmen orientation 
program, 

Terry Wafler, South band 
director, said the public is .in- 
vited to attend. Admission is by 
season ticket or single «per- 
formance seats at the door will 
cost 75 cents for adults and 35 
cents for students. 

Refreshments will be 
provided following the per- 
formance, which will include 
selections from the “big band" 
sounds, as well as rock and 
polka music, 


$ YOU MADE US DO IT 8 


EMIL TOFFANT 
A GOOD 


POLICEMAN 


A Goop TEAM 


VOTE — MARCH 21, 1978 — DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY 


a 
PAID FOR BY COMMITTEE TO KEEP ANDY MATOERSIAN AS CIRCUIT JUDGE. DR. ALBERT W. TRTANJ, 
CHAIRMAN, 52 OAKLAWN, GRANITE CITY, ILLINOIS 62040. 


AND WELOVE IT! 8° 


Your. wonderful response t®@ 
Budget Opticals LOW COST. 
HIGH QUALITY EYEGLASSES @ 
prompted us to move to larger 
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SSUDCET OPTICAL, INCS 


; BETWEEN THE OLD BIEDERMANN BLDG. AND 
30-5:30 DAILY e 877-8379 


ANDY MATOESIAN 
. A GOOD 


JUDGE 


USED 
eit 


TRUCK 
Sy da HT By 


Bargains and more bargains on hundreds of 
late-model, low-mileage beauties. 


75 DODGE 


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4 door, loaded with extras, 
a great family car! 
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'75 MALIBU 


Station wagon, automatic; 
power steering, radio, 
look at this one. 

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STK No. 260A 


"77 MALIBU 


Landau, 2 oor, silver and 
black, only 7,xxx miles... 


STK No. 708A 


’75 FORD WAGON 


Squire, 9 passenger, full 
power, for work or play .. 
STK No. 740B 


'76 Ford Ranchero 


V8, automatic, new tires, 
power steering - brakes, 
tape stripes. STK. No. 490A 


'77 THUNDERBIRD 


Loaded with equipment, 
‘one owner, top condition. 
STK No. 710A 





vont. Long in looks, 
‘Does not include trans- 
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ates. Your actual mileage 
may vary, depending on your vehicle's 
condition, optional equipment, how 


and where you drive. 33 MPG highw: 


23 MPG 


$3589: 
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New Pinto Pony. Sporty. Fun to drive. 
Seats four. 2.3 litre engine and manual 
Aransmission. *Ooes not include trans- 
portation, dealer prep, title and taxes. 
**EPA estimates. Your actual mileage 
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ondition-optional equipment, how 

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$3064: 


34 MPG highway, 
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B. E. HOHLT FORD’ 


452-2160 


1837 MADISON AVENUE 


876-0305 





SQUEEZING BY. This motorist is seen narrowly 
missing a wide and ‘deep hole at the edge of Maryville 
Road at Stratford Lane Thursday afternoon. The hole is 
at the edge of concrete poured during the Maryville 


New communications system for 
the Norfolk and Western Railway 


Leffler acting 
security chief 


Gary L, Gunter, director of 
security at Southern Illinois 
University at Edwardsville 
since 1974, announced Monday 
to the university police that he 
will discontinue serving as 
director, effective March 1. He 
said he had requested to be 
relieved of his duties for per- 
sonal reasons. 

Dr. Ria C. Frijters, vice- 
president for business affairs at 
SIUE, said Gunter’s request 
had been accepted and he will 
be permitted to continue as a 
member of the university police 
department. 

She has asked Tom Leffler, 
who is assigned half-time as a 
special assistant to the 
president and half-time to the 
Office of the Vice-President for 
Business Affairs, to serve as 
acting director of security until 
a permanent appointment is 
made. Leffler is a former 


director of security at SIU at- 


Carbondale. 

Dr. Frijters said a committee 
will be named in the near future 
to begin searching for a person 
to fill the position permanently. 

Gunter joined the SIUE 
security office in 1968 after 
serving 11 years with the Illinois 
State Police. He also has served 
with the Illinois Crime Com. 
mission and the Chicago park 
police. 


COMPLETE 
TRUST SERVICES 


Your attorney and our trust de. 
partment can make sure your 
family gets maximum protection, 
Call Bob Hildebrand of 876-1212 


GRANITE CITY TRUST 
and SAVINGS BANK 


Member F D.1.C 


When Sue Saul joined the 
Norfolk and Western Railway 
Company as a_ telephone 
operator, Franklin Roosevelt 
lived in the White House, World 
War II was in progress, and two 
pounds of hamburger cost 55 
cents at the local grocery store. 

It was January 1944. NW, at 
that time, had the most modern 
telephone system available to 
private industry. The system 
was manually operated and it 
required that an operator 
handle every incoming call and 
place every outgoing call. 

It was also a time when NW 
trains were powered by steam, 
when payrolls were prepared by 
clerks wearing green 
eyeshades, when railroad hot 
boxes were detected only by 
sight and smell. 

Today, NW lives in the age of 
diesel locomotives, computers, 
and heat-sensing defective 
equipment detectors. 

Its voice communication 
system is among the best in the 
railroad industry. It's 
automatic, faster, and tran- 
smits its signals by microwave 
radio rather than just through 
wires. 

“Comparing that telephone 
system with the com- 
munications system we have 
today is like comparing a 
bicycle with a Lincoln Con- 
tinental,”’ said Mrs. Saul, NW’s 
chief operator. We are dealing 
with two different worlds 
Things are a lot easier now.” 

NW installed its first dial 
telephones in the late 1950s and 
has made numerous. other 
modifications to its com- 
munications network over the 
years. 

The company currently is 


GRANITE CITY OPTICIANS 


PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THAT THEIR FITTING OF 


que 


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travue 


PROGRESSIVE POWER LENS 


HAS BEEN AN ULTRA SUCCESS!! 


This exciting new lens has no lines as conven- 
tional bifocals or trifocals do! 


As CERTIFIED DISPENSERS 
of this lens, we are backed| 
by American Optical Corp's 


guarantee. 


‘To date, with our use of the Grolman Fitting 
Device and system for this lens, we have had 


none of our patients exercise their guarantee 
option... 100% success! 


LOOK TO US TO LOOK YOUR BEST! 
There is a difference—Seeing is believing! 


Granite City Opticians, Inc. - 
12 Nameoki Village Behind Gasens & Krogers 


OVER 7 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION 
: --. WE HAVE NOT MOVED 


PHONE 452-5154 


Road widening project in 1977. A high volume of traffic 


at the intersection has hastened erosion of 
depression. The hole has since been filled. 


completing installation of a $17 
million communications system 
which will accommodate its 
needs until the end of the 20th 
Century. 

“The completion of this 
project represents an important 
milepost for Norfolk and 
Western," says Robert B 
Claytor, NW executive vice- 
president. ‘While we are better 
able to serve our shippers by 
speeding the exchange of 
needed information, we also are 
able to achieve significant 
economic benefits." 

NW's communications 
modernization project has not 
only provided improved 
facilities for the transmission of 
private railroad-dialed con- 
versations, but has made 
possible the exchange of 
computer data between various 
locations throughout its 14-state 
service area. 

Improvements were also 
made to the company’s VHF 
two-way radio system to in- 
crease reliability of com- 
munications between train 
dispatchers, train crews, and 
other personnel along the right- 
of-way, 

The need for a new com- 
munications system was 
brought about through the 
growth of the Norfolk and 
Western system over the past 20 
years and the anticipated needs 
during the next two 
generations. 

Beginning with the merger of 
the Virginian Railway in 1959 
and the addition of the Wabash 
and Nickel Plate railroads in 
October 1964, the NW System 
tripled its size and expanded its 
service from four states to 14 
states. This growth placed new 
demands on the carrier for 
accurate, ‘timely information 

The new communications 
system consolidates and 
upgrades these independent 
systems. At the same time, the 
new system has the expansion 
capacity sufficient to ac- 
commodate NW's projected 
communications needs through 
1995. 

The major portion of the 
project is a  2,000-mile 
microwave network ~ which 
interconnects company 
headquarters in Roanoke, Va., 
with various railroad offices 
from Norfolk, Va., Cleveland, 
Ohio, and Buffalo, N.Y., in the 


East, to Kansas City, the St.” 


Louis metropolitan area and 
Chicago in the Midwest. 

Among the features of NW’s 
new telephone communication 
system are direct distance 
dialing of company calls to 112 
railroad locations; direct 
distance dialing of calls to 16 
across the 
railroad’s 14-state service area; 
three-way calls and improved 
call transferring; and expanded 
use of the carrier’s car in- 
formation data and computer 
system. 

To achieve that level of 
service; and improve com- 
munications along the right-of- 
way, most of the telephone 
switching equipment was 
replaced. 

Much of the equipment was 
around 20 years old, but in this 
area a private branch exchange 
(PBX) machine which was 
replaced dated back 50 years. It 
was the last such machine in 


major cities 


the 


(rest Record Phoso) 


service in Southwestern Bell's! 
territory. 

Today, there are 335 dial’ 
channels in service between 24 
switchboards. A couple of years 
ago there were only 80 dial 
channels 
switchboards. 

While NW’s total 


over the period to an average of 
$375,000 monthly, savings have 


been realized through the im-< 


provements. 


The changes have not gone ; 


linnoticed by NW’s chief 
operator and her companions at 
the switchboard. 

“We have noticed a big dif- 
ference since the few equip- 
ment and microwave were 
installed,” said Mrs. Saul. “We 


used to handle between 5,000% 


and 6,000 calls a day, but with 
the improvements operators 
only handle about 2,500 in- 
dividual calls daily.” 

The idea of converting to a 
microwave system was first = 
discussed at Norfolk and 
Western in 1970 but actual * 


planning did “not begin until 


1973. 

Following the modernization 
of several private telephone 
switching centers and im- 
provements in the VHF two- 
way radio system for train 
crews, construction of 95 
microwave relay stations began 
in the spring of 1975. 

In the interest of improved 
efficiency and reduced costs, 
NW is sharing several sites and 
microwave communications 
channels with 
System and the Illinois Central 
Gulf railroads. 


Tamra Terrell 
on dean's list 


A total of 1,176 undergraduate 
students at Murray State 
University earned recognition 
on the dean’s list for high 
scholarship during the 1977 fall 
semester. 

Among that number are 243 
who achieved a perfect 4.00 
standing. Others on the dean's 
list had grade point standings 
between 3.30 and 4.00. Standings 
are figured on the basis of 4.00 
for A, 3.00 for B, 2.00 for C, and 
1.00 for D grades. 

Full-time undergraduate 
enrollment for the fall semester 
was 5,376. 

Records from the university's 
data processing offi¢e show 
Tamra Terrell of 31 Oakland 
Drive, Granite City, included on 
the dean’s list. 


BREAK INTO TRAILERS 

Two construction trailers 
within a few blocks of each 
other were broken into, 
authorities discovered Monday. 
Nothing was taken from a C. D. 
Peters Co. mobile office, parked 
at 25th Street and Nameoki 
Drive, and a Seebold Concrete 
trailer at 22nd Street and the 
railroad tracks was entered and 
two spare trailer tires valued at 
a total of $100 were stolen. The 
Peters office was pried open 
with what appeared to be a tire 
tool. 


UNDERCOATING— 
RALPH'S TEXACO 
22ND & MADISON AVE. 


in use between 22 


telephone © 
billings have increased slightly = 


the Chessie * 


NUMEROUS CHUCKHOLES can be seen in this view looking east on Stratford 
Lane as a motorist approaches Maryville Road Thursday afternoon. Deep holes are just 
some of the obstacles facing Quad-City drivers. A six-week snow and ice cover has made 


many streets hazardous but numerous holes have been filled. 


Nurses workshop at SIUE 


A workshop on infection 
control will be offered at 
Southern Illinois University at 
Edwardsville March 16 in the 
Mississippi-Illinois Room of the 
University Center from 8:30 
a.m. until 3:30 p.m. The 
workshop is for nurses wishing 
to expand their knowledge in 
the field of health care delivery 

The one-day workshop will be 
co-sponsored by the Continuing 
Education Program of the SIUE 
School of Nursing and the 
Southern Llinois . Society for 
Health Manpower, Education 
and Training. 

Instructor for the course will 
be Sue Crow, infection control 
nurse for the Confederate 
Memorial Medical Center in 
Shreveport, La. Registration is 
$8. Deadline for registration 
will be March 9. Participants 
attending the workshop will 
earn six contact hours. 

Program content includes an 


examination of the nurse's role 
in infection control, a review of 
bacteriology to understand the 
control of organisms, and the 
development of more effective 
infection control programs. 
Additional information may 
be obtained by contacting the 
School of Nursing at SIUE. 


FEDERAL AND STATE 


Income 
Tax Returns 
Prepared 


V-R Tax Service 


ROY E. NORTON 
1931 Edison 877-4600 


OPEN EVENINGS 


at Re) 


EXCEPT WED. 


Press: Record Photo! 


JACKSON’S ORDERS 
General Andrew Jackson 
‘was ordered to take the field 
on Feb. 18, 1818, against In- 

dians terrorizing Florida. 


. Communications. 


GRANITE CITY PRES: 


Thurs.. Feb. 23, 1978 mee: 


Controllers 
save 59. 
aircraft 


Eighty-two air traffic .con- 
trollers of the Air Force 
Service 
(AFCS) have been credited with 
saving 59 aircraft and 397 crew 
members| and passengers 
during 1977. Headquarters of 
the AFCS are at Scott Air Force 
Base near Belleville. 

The AFCS air traffic con- 
trollers were cited for either 
warning pilots of @angerous 
situations or guiding distressed 
aircraft to safe landings 
through the use of radar or 
visual sightings. 

Involved in the 1977 ‘‘saves’’ 
were 24 military and 35 civilian 
aircraft having, a monetary 
value of more than $60,400,000. 

Since the AFCS was activated 
in July 1961, air traffic con- 
trollers — operating at bases 
around the world — have been 
credited with saving 1,520 
aircraft, worth more than $1.6 
billion and carrying 5,789 
military and eivilian 
passengers. 

Anaircraft “save” is credited 
only after an incident meets 
stringent criteria set forth by an 
Aircraft Save Review Board 
which meets at the AFCS 
headquarters. 

The board determines the 
validity of all claims by AFCS 
air traffic controllers. A cer- 
tificate is issued to the involved 
controllers when the board 
authenticates a “save.” 

The definition of a ‘‘save’’ is 
the safe recovery of an im- 
periled aircraft through ex- 
traordinary and timely ap- 
plication of air traffic control 
knowledge, techniques and 
procedures when there is 
reasonable doubt that, the 
aircraft would have been 
recovered without such action. 

In addition to air traffic 
control and navigational aid 
facilities and services, the more 
than 45,000" AFCS personnel 
engineer, install, operate and 
maintain communications-e- 
lectronics-meterological equip- 
ment for the Air Force and 
selected “government. and 
civilian agencies, 


INSULATION 


YOUR BEST HOME IMPROVEMENT 
AS FUEL COSTS SOAR 


Between 1969 & 1975 


GAS UP 62% — ELECTRICITY UP 77 % 
Source St. Pouls Post Dispatch Augus! 22, 1976 


© BLOWN CELLULOSE FOR 


WALLS & ATTICS 


© PUMPED IN FOAM INSULATION 


FOR WALLS 


@ NEW OR OLD HOMES 
FINANCING AVAILABLE — FREE ESTIMATES 


Fireplace Center’ 


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2057 EDISON GRANITE CITY 


FINANCING 
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..Temco Wood Burning Fireplace 


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CONTRACTORS INQUIRIES INVITED 


Zero clearance to combustible for 
installation 


end placement 


flexibility. 


2. The tinal trim is left to your creative 
taste in the selection & use of bricks. tile, 
sfohe, metal or morbl 
Back, bottom and sides of firebox 
ine with full ) inch thick reinforced fire 


4. Built-in pull screens at ho ext: 

Glass door option availble. 
5. Knock out plugs for gas fire storter on 
each side, to 

6. Requires no special ‘or foun- 
dation '& con Ge Installed or wroteon 
Hoors, against e: 

7. Does not take your 

your room to cool firebox. Built hearth 
right up to firebox. 

8. Positive shut off damper to eliminate 
cir leakage thy chimney and also 
5 Chote eae wiple woh chien 

E iene ith 
snap lock forieasy instollation. 





x 
GRANITE CITY PRESS-RECORD 


Thurs.. Feb, 23,1978 Page 44 


Canal freight hits 
64 million tons 
during 1977 year 


Despite a reduction of 203 
percent in shipments of com- 
mercial freight through the 
Chain of Rocks canal during 
January and February last 
year, 1977 ended with total 
freight movements of 64,265,100 
tons for the 12-month period, 
according to a report by the 
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 
which operates the locks. 

While the total shipments 
were 276,562 tons less than the 
1976 freight shipments of 
64,541,662 tons, substantial 
gains over 1976 movements 
were shown in nine months of 
the 1977 year just ended. 

Cold weather which sent 
temperatures plunging to 15 
degrees below zero during 
January 1977, resulting in a 

, freeze that blocked river 
movements on the Mississippi, 
reduced freight movements to 
only 775,000 tons during that 
month, This compared with 
shipments of 3,346,231 tons 
during January 1976. 

During February, shipments 
also fell off sharply due to cold 
weather and ice in the river, for 
a total of only 1,983,700 tons, 
compared with 5,028,004 tons of 
river freight moving through 
the canal during February of 
the previous year. 

This meant that a total of 
2,758,700 tons of freight were 
locked through the canal during 
January and February 1977, 
compared to a total of 8,374,235 
tons that moved through the 
canal during the same two 
months of the previous year — a 
drop of 203 percent. 

In the following month of 
March, freight traffic picked up 
with a total of 6,061,800 tons 
locked through the canal, up 
from a total of 5,233,107 tons 
shipped during March 1976. 

River traffic continued to 
increase as the weather im- 
proved, with total shipments of 
6,664,100 tons locked through the 
canal during April, up from 
5,600,730 tons in the same month 
of the previous year 

During May, shipments in- 
creased again to a total of 
6;885,700 tons, an increase over 
shipments of 6,741,039 tons 
during the same month of 1976. 

June shipments showed a 
slight drop at 6,259,800 tons as 
compared with 6,321,947 tons 
moving through the canal in the 

same month of the previous 
year. 


During July, 


KEEP 


ANDY MATOESIAN 
AS CIRCUIT JUDGE 


Fold tor by committee 
a ‘ae Cireul? dud 


shipments 


fo keep Andy 
a Dr. Al Trtanh, 
Chairman, 


totaled 6,400,500 tons, up from 
5,757,409 tons, and in August 
totaled 6,825,900 tons, up from 
5,298,535 tons moved through 
the canal in the same month in 
1976. 

In ‘September, shipments 
were up again, totaling 5,799,000 
tons, compared with 5,631,757 
tons during that month in 1976. 
October shipments totaled 
6,128,000 tons, up from 5,881,130 
tons, and November freight 
movements totaled 6,055,800 
tons, compared with 5,352,680 
tons in November 1976. 

During December, freight 
movements totaled 4,425,800 
tons in what seasonally is one of 
the lightest months of the year. 
This compared with 4,349,093 
tons in the same month in 1976. 

The report shows that during 
the year, freight moving 
through the locks here included 
31,014,000 tons of grain, 
representing 48 percent of the 
year’s total shipments. - Coal 
amounted to 6,911,000 tons of the 
total, or 11 percent. 

Total freight shipments in- 
cluded 10,489,000 tons of 
petroleum products, or 16 
percent of the total, and 
7,626,000 tons of chemicals, or 12 
percent of the total 

Tron and steel products ac- 
counted for 2,858,000 tons of the 
total 1977 freight and shipments 
of cement, sand and gravel 
totaled 2,846,000 tons, or 4 
percent of the total. 
Miscellaneous commodities 
totaled 2,521,100 ‘tons, or 4 
percent 


Additional food 


sanitation class 


A new food service sanitation 
course will be offered through 
the Belleville Area College 
extension program in Granite 
City beginning Tuesday, March 
28. 


The coordinator, Frank 
Kraus, has noted that the. 
demand for the class’ is sib- 
stantial, since a state law 
requiring certified food service 
sanitation workers in each 
establishment goes into effect 
July 1. 

Two food service sanitation 
courses are presently under 
way at the Granite City ex- 
tension center. 

The eight-week course will 
meet each Tuesday from 7 p.m 
to 9:45 p.m. in Room 125, 
Granite City High School South 
Tuition is $16.50. Cost of books 
for the course is $13 

Registration may be com- 
pleted in class during the first 
session March 28. More  in- 
formation may be obtained by 
calling 876-7570. 


LOANS TO ‘10,000 
for fast, feiendly help with 


LEFTOVER HOLIDAY BILLS ¢« 
AND WINTER EXPENSES) « 
CAR REPAIRS e ETC, 


YEAR-END 
HOME OR 
« ETC. e ETC. e ETC. 


DON PALOVCHIK 
877-0993 


CROWN FINANCE CORPORATION 


1320 NIEDRINGHAUS, GRANITE CITY, ILL. 


TELEVISION 
Sets Repaired 


7 TV SERVICE COUPON = 


STATE FLAG PRESENTATION. An Illinois state 

flag is presented to the City of Venice last week for the 

_ flagpole in front of the Venice City Hall. From left to 
right are Fireman~Thomas W. Britt, Venice Mayor 


Social Security role 
in financial planning 


Today's workers should be 
aware of the role Social 
Security retirement benefits 
will play in their financial 
planning for retirement, in the 
opinion of John Nathan, Social 
Secyrity district manager in 
East St. Louis. 

“Men and women now 
working in jobs or self- 
employment covered by Social 
Security should be aware that 
retirement benefits are in- 
tended to be only a partial 
replacement of pre-retirement 
earnings,"" Nathan comments. 

“For example, Social 
Security retirement benefits 
will replace about 44 percent of 
the pre-retirement earnings of a 
65-year-old wroker who has had 
median earnings. 

“Median earnings amounted 
to just under $9,000 in 1976. If 
this worker has a 65-year-old 
wife, then their combined 
retirement benefits will amount 
to about two-thirds of pre- 
retirement earnings. 

“The replacement rate for 
higher paid workers. is 
somewhat less, while the 
replacentent rate for lower paid 
workers is higher than that for 
workers with median earnings 

“To assure sufficient income 
to maintain a person’s pre- 
retirement standard of living, 
the worker should plan well in 
advance of retirement to 
supplement his Social Security 
benefits. 

“This can be done through 
savings, investments, in- 
surance and other income 
protection plans,” Nathan said 

“And income from these 
other sources usually will have 
no effect on benefit payments, 
and then only if the worker's 
earnings exceed the annual 
earnings exempt amount, $3,000 
for 1977. 

“Today's workers should also 
be aware that Social Security 
provides much more than 
retirement benefits. 

“There is survivor and 
disability protection for the 
worker and his or her family 
during the working years. 


@ 


WORTH 


*9.50 


ON TV WORK GOOD UNTIL 
FEB. 28, 1978 


We work on most brands and factory 


_BERT' 


910 DELMAR 


authorized on many. We also sell the 
only. TV and. stereo with an exclusive 
4 year. warranty so you will not have to 
worry about unwanted repair costs. . . 
CURTIS MATHESII! 


AUDIO TV SHOWROOM 
CB AUTOSOUND 


877-7600 


FREE PARKING IN REAR 


“About 30 percent of a per- 
son's Social Security tax dollars 
go to pay for this kind of 
protection. And then; there. is 
Medicare for people 65 and 
over, as well as for certain 
younger disabled people—and 
for insured people and their 
dependents who suffer per- 
manent kidney failure. 

‘Additional information 
about Social —_ Security 
retirement, survivor and 
isability benefits and about 
Medicare can be obtained at the 
East St. Louis Social Security 
office, located at 650 Missouri 
Ave. The telephone number is 
274-4100."" 


9 on deans’ 
list at U. 
of Illinois 


Deans’ lists for 10 colleges 
and three other academic units 
at the University of Illinois at 
Urbana-Champaign for the 1977 
fall semester were announced 
this week arid include nine 
Quad-Cityans. 

To be eligible for such lists, a 
student must rank in the top 20 
percent of his or her college 
class or curriculum 

Liberal Arts and Sciences 
students on the dean's list are 
Paul Robert Becherer, 2111 
Clark Ave., James W. Maxfield, 
25 Arlington Drive, Robert 


Sawicki, 2665 Adams St., Eric ] 


Premer Thoelke, Rural Route. 


Two, and Brent William Weiss, } 


66 Karen Drive. 


Commerce and Business 4 
Administration students cited 4 
are Paul Lee Harris, 2312 State ] 


St., and David Allen Heth, 2324. 
Benton St. 

Duane C. Atchley, 14 Mercer 
Drive, has qualified for the 
Engineering dean’s list. 

And qualifying in Agriculture 
is Randall James Moore, 2465 
Lynch Ave. 


OHIO ADMITTED 
Ohio was admitted to the 
Union as the 17th state on 
Feb. 19, 1803. 


IT'S GREAT 
TO BEALION 


“WE SERVE" 
MEETINGS: . 
GRANITE CITY LIONS CLUI 
2nd & 4th Thursdays, 7:00 P.M. 
Charlie's Restaurant & Loung 
MADISON LIONS CLUB 
Every Thursday, 7:30 P.M. 


_ _Amvets Club Post 204. 
PONTOON BEACH LIONS CLUB 


1st & Sed Thursdays, 8:00 P.M... 
Frank's D-A-P Rest. & Loung 


nae 


William M. Ebersoldt, Chief of Police Ralph D. Brawley, 
George Green, city hall custodian, State Senator Sam 


Vadalabene, who made 


the presentation, 


Lloyd 


Patterson, city clerk, and Carl Brynes, city comptroller. 


Man recuperating 


Richard Schneider, 48, of 2765 
Washington Aye. is 
recuperating in St! Elizabeth 
Hospital from injuries suffered 
in an accident at Granite City 
Steel Feb. 14. 

Schneider suffered fractured 
ribs, a dislocation of his left 
shoulder and a cut to the left 
side of his head during a plant 
accident 


(Pres: Record Photo 


JOHNSON PARTY TODAY 

A fund-raising cocktail party 
for Associate Judge Bill 
Johnson, Democratic primary 
candidate for circuit judge, will 
be held from 7 to 9 p.m, today at 
the Wood River VFW, 231 
Edwardsville Road, Wood 


‘River. Paul Bowler of Granite 


City has tickets and may be 
reached at 931-4514, Tickets also 
will be available at the door. 


FRIEDMAN'S 
FIFTH & MADISON 


MADISON, ILLINOIS 
PHONE 877.4000 


42” DELUXE CHINA 


42" x 20° x 72” 


Custom kitchen storage with ex- 
tended plastic work area mag- 
netic catches, utility drawer. 


104° 


$5.00 Additional for Coppertone, 


Reg. 
$140.95 


SIUE seeks volunteers for _ 


OM AEMIEY 
© DETINEB 
“TIAL 


work program in Africa 


Operation Crossroads Africa 
is now entering the final stage of 
recruiting for Summer 1978 
Work-Travel Study Programs 
in Africa, according to Earl 
Lazerson, vice-president and 
provost at Southern Illinois 
University at Edwardsville. 

During the past 20 years, 
Operation Crossroads Africa 
has sent more than 5,000 
American volunteers, including 
students and teachers, to 4 
French-speaking and English- 
speaking African countries 
during the summer. 

The volunteers live’in rural 
village communities and assist 
with vital self-help projects that 
involve building schools and 
health clinics, agriculture, 
music, art, archaeology, health 
education, journalism and 
community development. 

This experience provides a 
brief but intense immersion in 
traditional African life and 
pushes individuals to re- 
examine basic attitudes, 
standards and beliefs in 
relations to people with con- 
trasting values and life-styles. 


Volunteers often arrange to 
receive academic credit for 
their summer experience and 
many find that they are helped 
into professional ‘careers in 
international relations higher 
education and business. \ 

Persons interested in par- 
ticipating in the Summer 1978 
Work-Trayel-Study Program 
must apply ‘immediately and 
contact the Office of Vice 
President and Provost at SIUE, 
located in Room 3102 of the John 
S. Rendleman Building. 


ZONING HEARING “ 

The Madison County Zoning 
Board of Appeals will conduct 
an on-site public hearing at 9:05 
a.m. Thursday, March 2, at 2537 
North St., where Walter E. 
Griffith Jr., property owner, 
and Bernice Tellor, mobile 
home occupant, are requesting 
a special use permit for 
placement of a mobile home. 
The property is in an R-3 
residential district of Venice 
Township. 


SPECIAL NOTICE 


FROM 


MISSISSIPPI VALLEY ALARM CO. 
rer: BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEMS 








EXISTING ALARMS 








WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO CONNECT YOUR 
HOME OR BUSINESS ALARM SYSTEM TO THE 
NEW, COMPUTER AT THE GRANITE CITY 


POLICE DEPT. 


—orR— 
SAVE ALARM CONVERTING EXPENSE 


MISSISSIPPI 


VALLEY ALARM WILL MONITOR 


YOUR DIALER ALARM SYSTEM. 
CALL FOR DETAILS. 


NEW ALARM SALE 





20% DISCOUNT FROM FEB. 16th TO 28th 
~ MISSISSIPPI VALLEY ALARM CO. 


(FORMERLY J&J ALARM) 
24 HOUR OFFICE—876-3161 


REFERENCES FURNISHED 


GRANITE CITY BASED 


Outstanding 


ALL STEEL 


CABINET 
LUES 


Choice of White, Coppertone, Avocado & 


Harvest Gold 


plus strong lock. 
Sandalwood finish. 
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72" WARDROBE 
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Reg. $115.95 


24-INCH REG. $75.95 


BASE CABINET. ... 


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WARDROBE 


42" x21" x72” 
Hat shelf, storage drawer below, 


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Plastic top. Double shelf stor- 
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BASE CABINET. ... 


66" WARDROBE 
36" x21" x66" 
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2 shelves, mirror. 
Satin brown finish. 


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MONDAYS THRU 
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1 
SANDLEWOOD FINISH 


$3395 ee 


Reg. $63.50 


2 DOOR UTILITY 
4 shelves, deep vegetable 


FIFTH & MADISON. 


MADISON, ILLINOIS 


bin. Arctic White Finish. 


FREE PARKING 
FREE DELIVERY 
CONVENIENT TER O